Welcome to IBUS 20002 :
Sem 2 2019
Business in the Global
      Economy
Dr. Ruby Ranjan
                            1
Nuts and BoLts
 Some information about ME ...
   Dr. Ruby Ranjan
   Thesis on: Country of origin and Competitive Advantage: The case of MNCs transferring reward management practices to subsidiaries in
   Australia.
   Lecturer and Unit coordinator
    Business in the Global Economy
    Issues in Managing the Multinational
    International Management (Monash)
   Email: Ruby.Ranjan@unimelb.edu.au
   Area of interest: IB and IM issues; also teaching Ethics and Corporate
   Governance, HRM and Managing people and Organisation.
                                                                                                                                          2
        We want to know about your interest in
        Business in the Global economy....
Why did you choose this unit?         How do you think these news/events relate to
                                      Issues in Business in Global Economy:
What do you hope to learn from this    The US and China are locked in a bitter trade battle.
unit?                                 BBC News, 29th June, 2019
                                      https://www.bbc.com/news/business-45899310
                                       U.S. and China Extend Talks as the Two Sides Race to
                                        Reach a Trade Truce, New York Times, Feb 19, 2019.
                                          http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-07-13/why-a-us-
                                           trade-war-could-make-political-sense-for-donald-
                                           trump/9987946
                                          Boris Johnson vows Brexit in 99 days as he becomes Prime
                                           Minister- Published on Jul 24, 2019 Channel 4 News
                                           https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AaIF_17RaS0
                                       Rana Plaza factory collapse: Australian clothing retailers
                                        yet to sign Bangladesh safety accord
                                      http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-04-24/australian-clothing-retailers-
                                      yet-to-sign-factory-safety-accord/54080
                                      http://www.abc.net.au/pm/content/2014/s4048469.htm
                                       BRICS building July18,2014
                                      http://indianexpress.com/article/opinion/columns/brics-building/12:59
                                         am                                                                   3
      Today
Introductions and Administrative Details
Introduction to Globalisation: definitions and drivers
             Members of IBUS 20002
               Students of IBUS 2002
                 Course Co-ordinator
                 Dr. Ruby Ranjan
                      Lecturer
                  Dr. Ruby Ranjan
                       Tutors
               Dr Dau Youngsamart
                   Roslyn Zervos
                  Katherine Buzza
     Tutorial times and dates available on LMS
 Please email consultation request at least two days
                         prior
                                                        5
      What is Business in the Global
      Economy?
Two broad focal areas:
1.   Macro business environment
2.   Micro or firm-level analysis
        Some of the questions tackled in
        IBUS20002…
 How are                                    What does it
    firms                                    look like?
 affected?
             Business         The Global
                               Economy
               How and
 How can     why do they                     How do
 they take   participate in                 countries
advantage?         it?        How does it     differ?
                               all work?
       Subject Objectives
At the end of the semester you should be able to…
   Describe the global business environment (main features, nature and role
    of its main organisations and institutions);
   Characterise the phenomenon of globalisation;
   Have an understanding of the multinational firm;
   Analyse key international business decisions.
                       Subject Structure
Week   Date                Topic
1      31st July           Introduction to Globalisation
2      7th August          Globalisation continued; Dark side of Globalisation
                           and Black IB
3      14th August         Globalisation as a political project: governance
                           issues                                                                    From macro-
4      21st August         What makes nations different?: Cultural Context
                                                                                 The environment     to micro-
                                                                                 of International
                                                                                                     level of
                                                                                 Business
5      28h August          What makes nations different?: Political, Economic                        analysis
                           and Legal Context (1)
                                                                                                     i.e. from
6      4th Sept             Political, Economic and Legal Context (2)
                                                                                                     world-
                            Emerging Markets
                                                                                                     to country- to
                                                                                                     firm-
7      11th Sept           Theories of trade and investment                                          perspective.
8      18th Sept           Market selection and market entry
9      25th Sept           Guest Lecture
       2nd   October       Mid-semester break                                     Firm perspective
10     9th Oct             MNE strategy
11     16th Oct            Ethics and MNE
12     23rd Oct            Revision and Exam Preparation
        Teaching and learning contract:
        What we provide
Resources                             Support
• Readings surplus to text book       • Feedforward
  – Cases, short videos, articles     • Q&A forum on LMS
• Assignment specifications           • One-on-one consultations
                                      Evaluation
Activities
                                      • Feedback on assignment
• In-class case discussions
                                        submissions and presentations
• Questions for outside-class group
  discussions
       Teaching and learning contract:
       What we would like you to do
Regular attendance and                  Shared-learning
punctuality                             • In-class and outside-class
• For lectures and tutorials              – Questions, quizzes, debates
                                        • Group assignments
                                        • Constructive critiquing
                                          – Of theories/concepts, readings,
Guided self-learning                        even text book
• Engage with readings, topics and      • Remain in contact (through LMS,
  real-life examples                      email, conversations)
• Prepare for, attend and participate
  in lectures and tutorials  ask
  questions!                            Peer assessment and
• Individual assignment                 feedback
                                        • Conflict resolution
          Subject Readings
Textbook:
• Cavusgil, Knight, Riesenberger, Rammal and Rose,
  International Business: The New Realities, 2nd edition,
  Pearson Education Australia, 2015.
Plus supplementary lecture and tutorial readings on LMS
Lecture slides
        Independent Reading
Plus News media (The Guardian, Age, Australian, AFR..etc)
 … be careful that you cite only reputable sources!
       LMS for accessing all key information
http://www.lms.unimelb.edu.au/
Provides all Subject Resources
     Subject Guide and tips on succeeding on the course
     Lecture slides and Lecture capture
          PDF slide” format – print before coming into lecture
     Surplus reading materials under ‘Readings online’
     Assessment tasks, guidelines and marking criteria under ‘‘Assignment
      submission’ tab
          Submit via ‘Assignment Submission’ tab on this site
     Tutorial readings and exercises
             Guest Speaker
             (25th Sept)
Muan Lim graduated with a Bachelor of Commerce with Honours (1stClass) from The
University of Melbourne in 1977. Working with KPMG and PWC in audit, Muan was
accepted as an Associate of the Australian Institute of Chartered Accountants.
A 22 year veteran of HP, Muan has served many roles in Finance & Admin.,
Manufacturing, Supply Chain and Leasing. Muan was instrumental in setting up the
first joint venture leasing company in China, HP China Leasing Ltd and the first wholly
owned manufacturing arm for China’s domestic PC and Server business, HP Shanghai
Ltd. Amongst his many appointments were Finance Director Asia Pacific, VP Supply
Chain Asia Pacific Personal Systems Group, Global VP Finance and Remarketing.
Currently Muan is an Advisory Board member of the Department of Management &
Marketing, Faculty of Business and Economics (FBE), and a lifetime member of the
Chancellor’s Circle. Muan is happily retired, married with two children who are
graduates from FBE and the Arts Faculty.
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        Assessment tasks
Assessment Task      Individual and   Due               Weighting
                     Group
Assignment 1, 1200   Individual       11.00 am 28th     15%
words                                 August (Week 5)
NB: Assignment 1 +
marking criteria
already on LMS
Assignment 2, 2500   Group            11th October,    25%
words                                 @ 11.00 am (Week
                                      10)
Participation in     Individual       Weekly           10%
tutorials
End-of-semester      Individual       Assessment period 50%
exam
          Tutorials
Tutorials start next week (Week 2) and lag lectures by a week
Required reading/s to be uploaded prior to class (no readings
for Week 2)
Tute attendance, participation and contribution are assessed
Not in attendance                                                    0 marks
Physically there, participation in group work, no participation in   10% of the
the class discussions                                                total
Strong participation in group work and good participation in class   60% of the
discussions (making interesting contributions that are on topic)     total
Strong participation in group work, excellent contributions to       100% of the
class discussions (that propel our discussions forward and add a     total
new, relevant dimension to our discussions)
        Exam: It is a hurdle!!!
2-hour exam at end of semester
Exam advice: throughout semester and dedicated Week 12 lecture
            Student Referral Information
Enrolment             Go to:
(enrolling in         STOP 1
subjects, changing
subjects)
Class registration    Go to:
(registering into a   Class Registration Enquiry Management (CREM) system available from
particular lecture    the student portal.
stream or tutorial
group within a
subject)
Questions?
Introduction to Globalisation
        Introduction to Globalisation
Over the next three weeks:
  What is globalisation?
  What are the drivers of globalisation?
  What are some of the upsides and downsides of globalisation?
  Why do governments intervene and what are the forces limiting such
    intervention?
          What is globalisation?(1)
Numerous definitions of the phenomenon of globalisation.
• At a very general level, globalisation refers to the fact that people in one country are
  affected by events in other countries
• The shift towards a more integrated and interdependent world economy
• “Ongoing economic integration and growing interdependency of countries worldwide
  namely through trade and investment” – Cavusgil et al. 2015 (text book pg. 31)
Q: Can you think of any examples of the globalisation phenomenon?
              Six blind men and the elephant!
Touching each part of the elephant and creating a perception about the animal…
Source: http://www.globalenvision.org/forteachers/18/861/
Similarly, globalisation has created many different perceptions among the global population.
Depending on the exposure to globalisation and the extent of understanding, such perceptions
vary wildly from person to person and from country to country…
        Globalisation debate
World is flat:Thomas Friedman 2006
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4kTXwxwO8hY
Globalisation myth- Pankaj Ghemawat 2012
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KPNn880KWfU
            Globalisation: not a recent phenomenon
         Phases                                 Examples / consequences
Pre-Industrial: Silk road                    Pre-Industrial: International trade
Phase 1: 1830 to 1880s
• Industrial revolution in GB (steam
                                             Phase 1:Rise of manufacturing, cross-
  engine; railroads; ocean transport)
                                             border trade of commodities
Phase 2: 1900 to 1930                        Phase 2: First MNEs (Nestle, Siemens,
• Electricity and steel production
                                             Shell…) in extraction, agriculture
Phase 3: 1948 to 1970s                       Phase 3: Reduction of trade barriers,
• GATT (General Agreement on Tariffs and     cross-border money flow
  Trade; now WTO)                            Phase 4: Influx of new participants (SMEs,
Phase 4: 1980 to present                     new global players, etc); unprecedented
• Radical advances in technology             cross-border trade but also rising
                                             protectionism…
• Privatisation of state-owned enterprises
• Economic growth in emerging markets
           What has driven economic/business interdependencies
                              across nations?
The confluence of numerous factors:
   1)    Emergence (and charter extension) of supranational institutions (at a regional or global
         level):
 International administrative/regulatory bodies (e.g. GATT/WTO, EU, IMF, UNCTAD, ILO…),
   standards and judicial bodies (e.g. ISO, international courts of arbitration), professional bodies
   (e.g. FIDIC) and NGOs (e.g. Greenpeace, Fairtrade).
     Some of the key players
World Trade Organisation (WTO)                       “Washington
                                                     Consensus” Policies
International Monetary Fund
World Bank
                              Nation states: USA, UK, Japan, France,
G8(-1=G7), G20                Germany, Italy, Canada, + Brazil, Russia,
                              India, China, South Africa, Mexico,
                              Argentina, Australia, Indonesia, South
                              Korea, Saudi Arabia, Turkey and the
                              European Union
World Economic Forum - Davos, Switzerland
      What drives economic/business interdependencies across nations?
2)   Liberalisation of trade and foreign investment (eg. Opening of
     economies; bilateral and multilateral Free trade agreements)
3) Technological changes: the world “has become smaller”
• Improvements in transportation technology (freight and passengers),
  Internet, IT and communication technologies.
4) Mass media (e.g. satellite TV) and Internet
• Exposure to other nations’ lifestyles, products, brands, …
=> The above factors collectively drive economic and business links across
nations.
NB: Trade and FDI are driven by the above; but they are also drivers of the
above.
Actors
  Supra-national    United Nations, World Bank, WTO, IMF,
government bodies   EU
     National       Nearly 195 countries
   governments
      MNEs          Coca-Cola, IBM, BMW…
                    Greenpeace, Oxfam, Red Cross…
      NGOs
                    Thousands of SMEs and born globals
       SMEs
                    Expatriates, global teams
    Individuals
       Globalisation: 2 components
‘Globalisation of markets’
‘Globalisation of production’
• And the various impacts of these
  – A political economy approach
                                     35
              Globalisation of Markets
The merging of distinctly separate national markets
into a global marketplace. Tastes and preferences
converge onto a global norm.
    Global financial markets (e.g. traded freely across borders:
    bonds, currencies, derivatives…)
Explosive growth of investment and financial flows, capital markets and financial
instruments of varying complexity, buoyed by increased global market integration
           Enabled by regulatory access and
           technological changes
               Globalisation of markets
Global Product/Service Markets (in some industries)
 Commercial Aircraft
 Construction equipment
 Accounting services
           Globalisation of markets
Global Product/Service Markets (in some industries)
Consumers buying similar products/services for similar prices, at
similar times, from the same companies
         Globalisation of Production
“Refers to the sourcing of goods and services from locations around the globe to
take advantage of national differences in the cost and quality of factors of
production (such as labour, energy, land and capital” (Hill, 2005).
       Dispersal of the production process of good/service
to many locations to minimise costs and/or maximise
quality
               Why Companies Globalise?
 Increase size: capture market opportunities
 Increase size benefit from economies of scale
 Get access to resources
 Get access to low cost labor and infrastructure
 Get access to knowledge
 Serve global customers
 Reduce risks through geographic diversification
                                                    42
                     Fortune Global 500
              Top 10 Largest Global Companies
Rank Company              Country         Revenues ($ Mil.)   Profit ($ Mil.)
 1    Walmart             USA              $ 500,343          $ 9,862
 2    State Grid          China            $ 348,903          $ 9,533
 3    Sinopec Group       China            $ 326,953          $ 1,538
 4    China National      China            $ 326,008          -$ 691
      Petroleum
 5    Royal Dutch Shell   Netherlands      $ 311,870          $ 12,977
 6    Toyota Motor        Japan            $ 265,172          $ 22,510
 7    Volkswagen          Germany          $ 260,028          $ 13,107
 8    BP                  Britain          $ 244,582          $ 3,389
 9    Exxon Mobil         USA              $ 244,363          $ 19,710
 10   Berkshire           USA              $ 242,137          $ 44,940
      Hathaway
 11   Apple               USA              $ 229,234          $ 48,351
 12   Samsung             South Korea      $ 211,940          $ 36,575
      Electronics
                                        Source: Fortune, 2018
         Looking ahead
Globalisation will occupy us for the next two weeks.
Extent of globalisation, the role of developed and developing economies in
globalisation; the “dark side” of globalisation…
Remember to enrol for, attend your tutorial and meet your tutor.
Questions?
Thank you
See you next week!