Transcript Chap002
Chapter
2
Country Differences in
Political Economy
2-2
Opening case-India
Lessons learned:
Pace of reform determined by the interplay
between the economic goals of the reformers and
the political and cultural realities of the country
Managers need mental models to help them
Understand the similarities and differences of
political, economic, and legal infrastructures
in nations across the globe
Investigate the intricate changes in these
infrastructures that contain opportunities or
threats for the business
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Political Systems
System of Government in Nations”
Political systems have two dimensions
Degree
of collectivism vs. individualism
Degree of democracy vs. totalitarianism
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Collectivism
Collective goals are more important than
individual goals
Individual rights are sacrificed for the good of
the majority
In the modern world collectivism is expressed
through socialism
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Socialism
Socialist ideology is split into 2 broad camps
Communism
Communists
believe that socialism can only
be achieved through violent revolution and
totalitarian dictatorship
Social democracy
Marxist roots. State owned enterprises run
for public good rather than private profit
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Individualism
Is the direct opposite of collectivism
Central tenet is that individual economic
and political freedoms are the ground rules
on which society is based
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Democracy versus totalitarianism
Democracy and totalitarianism are at
different ends of a continuum with many
shades of gray in between
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Democracy
Government is by the people, exercised
either directly or through elected
representatives (representative
democracy)
Elected representatives are held
accountable through safeguards
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Safe guards of representative democracy
1.
Individuals right to freedom of expression, opinion and
organization,
2.Free media,
3. Regular elections
4. Adult suffrage
5. Limited terms for elected representatives
6. A fair court system that is independent from the political
system
7. A non political state bureaucracy
8. Nonpolitical force and armed service
9. Relatively free access to state information
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Totalitarianism
One person/party exercises absolute
control over all spheres of human life
(competing political parties are banned)
communist totalitarianism
theocratic totalitarianism
tribal totalitarianism
right wing totalitarianism
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Economic systems
Connection between political ideology
and economic systems
countries where individual goals are given
primacy free market economic systems are
fostered
countries where collective goals are given
primacy there is marked state control of
markets
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Types of economic systems
Market economy: what is produced & in what
quantity is determined by supply/demand and
signaled to producers through a price system
Command economy: planned by government
Mixed economy: a balance of both of the above
State-directed economy: the state directly
influences the investment activities of private
enterprise through “industrial policy”
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Legal systems
Rules - laws - that regulate behavior
processes through which laws are enforced
& grievances are redressed
Businesses must observe
home country laws
host country laws
international Laws and Treaties
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Legal systems
Three main types of legal systems – in use
around the world:
common law
civil law
theocratic law
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Legal systems
Four issues important to international
business
Contract law
Property rights
Protection of intellectual property
Product safety and liability
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Contract law
Contract law is the body of law that enforces a
contract
specifies conditions under which an exchange is
to occur
details rights and obligations of parties
Differences based on legal tradition
common law system
civil law system
theocratic law
bureaucratic law
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Contract law
Dispute resolution is often complex
where to arbitrate and whose laws apply?
host
country or home country
validity of contracts and decisions
Role of United Nations Convention on
Contracts for the International Sale of Goods
(CIGS)
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Property rights
A bundle of legal rights over the use to which
a resource is put and over the use made of any
income from that resource
Property rights can be violated through
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private action
public action and corruption
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Country rankings of corruption in 2002
Fig 2.1
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Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
The act was passed during the 1970s
following revelations that U.S. companies had
bribed government officials in foreign
countries in an attempt to win lucrative
contracts
The act allows facilitating or expediting
payments to secure the performance of a
routine governmental action
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Protection of intellectual property
Intellectual property refers to property that is
the product of intellectual activity
Patent: inventors’ exclusive rights to
manufacture, use, sale of an invention
Copyright: same for authors, composers, artists,
publishers
Trademarks: unique designs and names, often
officially registered
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Protection of intellectual property
Intellectual property laws are a very important
stimulus to innovation and creative work
Protection of intellectual property rights differs
greatly from country to country
WTO/GATT
96 countries have signed the Paris Convention
for the Protection of Industrial Property
Enforcement of regulations is difficult and
often lax
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Regional piracy rates for software 2001
Fig 2.2
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Product safety and liability
Product safety laws set safety standards for
products and manufacturing processes
Product liability laws hold the firm and its
officers responsible for product safety standards
Criminal laws/ civil liability laws
Least extensive in lesser developed countries
Raise important ethical issues for firms doing
business abroad
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Determinants of economic development
GNP measures total value of goods and
services produced annually
Does not account for differences in cost of living
PPP allows for more direct comparison of
living standards
Both GNP and PPP are static measures
They do not reflect development accurately
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GNI, PPP &GDP data for selected countries
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Gross national income per capita
Map 2.1
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Purchasing power parity, 2001
Map 2.2
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Growth in gross domestic product, 1991-2001
Map 2.3
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Amartya Sen- Theory of social development
Development should be measured less by
material output measures such as GNP,
per capita and more by the capabilities and
opportunities that people enjoy.
HDI measures quality of life in different
nations
Based on life expectancy, educational
attainment, and PPP based average incomes
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The human development index 2001
Map 2.4
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Innovation and economic progress
Innovation (products, processes, strategies,
organizations, management practices) engine for
growth
Innovation needs:
Market economy
Strong property rights
The “right” political system
Economic progress leads to
adoption of democracy
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Global distribution of economic freedom
Map 2.6
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States in transition
Reasons for rise of democratic systems in the
1980s and 1990s
Totalitarian regimes failed to deliver economic
progress
Real time information with modern
telecommunication technologies
Emergence of prosperous middle classes
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Countries with political freedom -2002
Map 2.5
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The new world order and global terrorism
Modernization has given rise to a resurgence
of fundamentalist thought in the Middle East
Global terrorism is the product of tensions
between civilizations and the clash of value
systems and ideology.
-Huntington
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Total international terrorist attacks 1981-2002
Fig: 2.3
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Spread of market based systems
Centrally
Planned
Economies
Shift
Market –
Based
Economies
Mixed
Economies
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The nature of economic transformation
Deregulation
Removal
of legal restriction to the free play
of market systems
Allowing establishment and operations of
private enterprises
Privatization
Transfer
of ownership of state owned
enterprise to private individuals
Legal systems
Laws
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that support a market economy
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Implications for international business
Country differences influence:
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Attractiveness
Benefits
First mover
Late mover advantages
Cost
Risk
Political risk
Economic risk
Legal risk
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Implications for international business
Country differences influence ethical
practices:
Ethics and human rights
Ethics & regulations
Ethics & corruption
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