1.
|
The
trend towards worldwide markets makes it easier to predict where competitors
will spring up.
FALSE
The rise of globalization,
meaning the rise of market capitalism around the world, means competitors can
now come from just about anywhere.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-01 The importance of international expansion as a viable diversification strategy. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: The Global Economy: A Brief Overview |
2.
|
Because
many countries are investing in countries other than their own, each country
is becoming more autonomous and independent.
FALSE
Globalization, which is on
the rise, has two meanings. One is the increase in international exchange,
including trade in goods and services as well as exchange of money, ideas,
and information. The second is the growing similarity of laws, rules, norms,
values, and ideas across countries.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-01 The importance of international expansion as a viable diversification strategy. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: The Global Economy: A Brief Overview |
3.
|
Increasing
international exchange in goods and services can run into the difficulty of
having one offer that meets the needs of customers at differing income
levels.
TRUE
One of the challenges with
globalization is determining how to meet the needs of customers at very
different income levels. In many developing economies, distributions of
income remain much wider than they do in the developed world, leaving many
impoverished even as the economies grow.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-01 The importance of international expansion as a viable diversification strategy. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: The Global Economy: A Brief Overview |
4.
|
By
2015, it is predicted that trade within nations will exceed trade across
nations.
FALSE
The trade among nations has
increased dramatically in recent years and it is estimated that by 2015, the
trade across nations will exceed the trade within nations.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-01 The importance of international expansion as a viable diversification strategy. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: The Global Economy: A Brief Overview |
5.
|
There
are risks associated with the Bottom of the Pyramid strategy. One of them is
that the new low-cost products that are developed may cannibalize the sales
of the core products of the company using the strategy.
TRUE
Firms need to actively manage
the risks that accompany BOP strategies. These include concerns about the
image of the firm if they are perceived as exploiting underprivileged
customers by providing them with substandard products or selling them
something they do not need or cannot afford. Second, there is a risk that a
low-end version of a brand may detract from the overall attractiveness of the
brand. Third, the new low-cost products they develop may cannibalize the
sales of their core products. Finally, firms employing a BOP strategy need to
be aware of the entrenched competitors they may face.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-01 The importance of international expansion as a viable diversification strategy. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: The Global Economy: A Brief Overview |
6.
|
Emerging
markets are growing slower than developed markets, thus shifting the
structure of the global economy.
FALSE
The growth experienced by
developed economies in the first decade of the 2000s was anemic, while the
growth in developing economies was robust. This trend is continuing, with
emerging markets growing 4 percent faster than developed markets in 2011 and
2012. This has resulted in a dramatic shift in the structure of the global
economy. As of 2013, over half the world output will come from emerging
markets.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-01 The importance of international expansion as a viable diversification strategy. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: The Global Economy: A Brief Overview |
7.
|
The
Michael Porter Diamond of National Advantage is a framework that explains why
countries foster successful multinational corporations based on factor
endowments and demand conditions only.
FALSE
The Porter Diamond of
National Advantage is a framework for explaining why countries foster
successful multinational corporations, consisting of four factors: factor
endowments; demand conditions; related and supporting industries; and firm
strategy, structure, and rivalry.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 07-02 The sources of national advantage; that is; why an industry in a given country is more (or less) successful than the same industry in another country. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Factors Affecting Nation Competitiveness |
8.
|
The
factor endowments of a country are inherited and cannot be created.
FALSE
Classical economics suggests
that factors of production such as land, labor, and capital are the building
blocks that create usable consumer goods and services. However, companies in
advanced nations seeking competitive advantage over firms in other nations
create many of the factors of production, such as skilled human resources.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-02 The sources of national advantage; that is; why an industry in a given country is more (or less) successful than the same industry in another country. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Factors Affecting Nation Competitiveness |
9.
|
With
regard to factor conditions, the pool of resources that a firm (or nation)
has is much more important than the speed and efficiency with which these
resources are deployed.
FALSE
The pool of resources is less
important than the speed and efficiency with which these resources are
deployed. Thus, firm-specific knowledge and skills created within a country
that are rare, valuable, difficult to imitate, and rapidly and efficiently
deployed are the factors of production that ultimately lead to competitive
advantage for the nation.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-02 The sources of national advantage; that is; why an industry in a given country is more (or less) successful than the same industry in another country. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Factors Affecting Nation Competitiveness |
10.
|
Demanding
domestic consumers tend to push firms to move ahead of companies in other
countries where consumers are less demanding and more complacent.
TRUE
Countries with demanding
consumers drive firms in that country to meet high standards, upgrade existing
products and services, and create innovative products and services. Denmark
is known for its environmental awareness. Demand from consumers for
environmentally safe products has spurred Danish manufacturers to become
leaders in water pollution control equipment which it exports successfully.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-02 The sources of national advantage; that is; why an industry in a given country is more (or less) successful than the same industry in another country. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Factors Affecting Nation Competitiveness |
11.
|
High
levels of environmental awareness in Denmark have led to a decline in Danish
industrial competitiveness in the international marketplace.
FALSE
Countries with demanding consumers
drive firms in that country to meet high standards, upgrade existing products
and services, and create innovative products and services. Denmark is known
for its environmental awareness. Demand from consumers for environmentally safe
products has spurred Danish manufacturers to become leaders in water
pollution control equipment which it exports successfully.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-02 The sources of national advantage; that is; why an industry in a given country is more (or less) successful than the same industry in another country. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Factors Affecting Nation Competitiveness |
12.
|
Countries
with a strong supplier base benefit by adding efficiency to downstream
activities.
TRUE
Related and supporting
industries enable firms to manage inputs more effectively. Countries with a
strong supplier base benefit by adding efficiency to downstream activities. A
competitive supplier base helps a firm obtain inputs using cost-effective, timely
methods, thus reducing manufacturing costs.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-02 The sources of national advantage; that is; why an industry in a given country is more (or less) successful than the same industry in another country. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Factors Affecting Nation Competitiveness |
13.
|
Typically,
intense rivalry in domestic markets does not force firms to look outside
their national boundaries for new markets.
FALSE
Domestic rivalry provides a
strong impetus for firms to innovate and find new sources of competitive
advantage. This intense rivalry forces firms to look outside their national
boundaries for new markets, setting up the conditions necessary for global
competitiveness.
|
AACSB: Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-02 The sources of national advantage; that is; why an industry in a given country is more (or less) successful than the same industry in another country. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Factors Affecting Nation Competitiveness |
14.
|
Many
international firms are increasing their efforts to market their products and
services to countries such as India and China as the ranks of their middle
class continue to increase.
TRUE
Many multinational firms are
intensifying their efforts to market their products and services to countries
such as India and China as the ranks of their middle class have increased
over the past decade. An OECD study predicts that consumption by middle-class
consumers in Asian markets will grow from $4.9 trillion in 2009 to over $30
trillion by 2020. At that point, Asia will make up 60 percent of global
middle-class consumption, up from 20 percent in 2009.
|
AACSB: Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-03 The motivations (or benefits) and the risks associated with international expansion; including the emerging trend for greater offshoring and outsourcing activity. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: International Expansion Company Motivations and Risks |
15.
|
Expanding
the global presence of a firm does not automatically increase its scale of
operations.
FALSE
Expanding company global
presence also automatically increases its scale of operations, providing it
with a larger revenue and asset base. Such an increase in revenues and asset
base potentially enables a firm to attain economies of scale. This provides
multiple benefits including the spreading of fixed costs such as Research and
Development over a larger volume of production. Examples include the sale of
Boeing commercial aircraft and Microsoft operating systems in many foreign
countries.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-03 The motivations (or benefits) and the risks associated with international expansion; including the emerging trend for greater offshoring and outsourcing activity. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: International Expansion Company Motivations and Risks |
16.
|
Arbitrage
opportunities are more than simple trading opportunities and account for a
large part of the success Walmart experiences.
TRUE
In its simplest form,
arbitrage involves buying something from where it is cheap and selling it
somewhere where it commands a higher price. A big part of the Walmart success
can be attributed to its expertise in arbitrage. The possibilities for
arbitrage are not necessarily confined to simple trading opportunities. It
can be applied to virtually any factor of production and every stage of the
value chain.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-03 The motivations (or benefits) and the risks associated with international expansion; including the emerging trend for greater offshoring and outsourcing activity. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: International Expansion Company Motivations and Risks |
17.
|
Arbitrage
opportunities in global financial markets are more attractive to local
companies than global corporations, because they enable them to buy in huge
volume and therefore increase their bargaining power with suppliers.
FALSE
In the current integrated
global financial markets, a firm can borrow anywhere in the world where
capital is cheap and use it to fund a project in a country where capital is expensive.
Such arbitrage opportunities are even more attractive to global corporations
because their larger size enables them to buy in huge volume, thus increasing
their bargaining power with suppliers.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-03 The motivations (or benefits) and the risks associated with international expansion; including the emerging trend for greater offshoring and outsourcing activity. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: International Expansion Company Motivations and Risks |
18.
|
International
expansion can extend the life cycle of a product that is in its maturity
stage in the company home country.
TRUE
Extending the life cycle of a
product that is in its maturity stage in a firms home country but that has
greater demand potential elsewhere is a benefit of international expansion.
In recent decades, U.S. soft-drink producers such as Coca-Cola and PepsiCo
have aggressively pursued international markets to attain levels of growth
that simply would not be available in the United States.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-03 The motivations (or benefits) and the risks associated with international expansion; including the emerging trend for greater offshoring and outsourcing activity. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: International Expansion Company Motivations and Risks |
19.
|
An
advantage of international expansion is that it can enable a firm to optimize
the location of every activity in its value chain.
TRUE
Optimizing the physical
location for every activity in its value chain is another benefit of
international expansion. Optimizing the location for every activity in the
value chain can yield one or more of three strategic advantages: performance
enhancement, cost reduction, and risk reduction.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-03 The motivations (or benefits) and the risks associated with international expansion; including the emerging trend for greater offshoring and outsourcing activity. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: International Expansion Company Motivations and Risks |
20.
|
The
laws and the enforcement of laws associated with the protection of
intellectual property rights, represent a significant currency and management
risk to multinational firms.
FALSE
There are four main types of
risk: political risk, economic risk, currency risk, and management risk. The
laws and the enforcement of laws associated with the protection of
intellectual property rights can be a major potential economic risk (rather
than currency or management risk) in entering new countries.
|
AACSB:
Analytic
Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-03 The motivations (or benefits) and the risks associated with international expansion; including the emerging trend for greater offshoring and outsourcing activity. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: International Expansion Company Motivations and Risks |
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