| 
21. | 
Reverse
  innovation occurs when a company develops a product that meets the needs of a
  developed country and then adapts it to the needs of the developing
  country.  FALSE 
Many leading companies are
  discovering that developing products specifically for emerging markets can
  pay off in a big way. In the past, multinational companies typically
  developed products for their rich home markets and then tried to sell them in
  developing countries with minor adaptations. However, as growth slows in rich
  nations and demand grows rapidly in developing countries such as India and
  China, this approach becomes increasingly inadequate. Instead, companies like
  GE have committed significant resources to developing products that meet the
  needs of developing nations, products that deliver adequate functionality at
  a fraction of the cost. These products have subsequently found considerable
  success in value segments in wealthy countries as well. Hence, this process
  is referred to as reverse innovation, a new motivation for international
  expansion. | 
| 
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 | 
| 
22. | 
The
  World Bank publishes the Euromoney magazine Country Risk Rating semiannual
  report. In the text, the January 2013 sampling of these ratings indicates
  that Norway is the best country in which to invest in terms of its expected
  level of risk based on the evaluation of its political, economic and
  structural risks and debt indicators and access to capital.  TRUE 
Euromoney magazine publishes
  a semiannual Country Risk Rating that evaluates political, economic, and
  other risks that entrants potentially face. Exhibit 7.3 presents a sample of
  country risk ratings, published by the World Bank, from the 178 countries
  that Euromoney evaluates. Note that the lower the score, the higher the
  expected level of risk for new entrants into the market. The overall risk
  rating score for Norway is 89.97. | 
| 
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 | 
| 
23. | 
Firms
  can eliminate political instability and adverse government actions risks by:
  competing in a range of geographic markets, developing stakeholder
  coalitions, cultivating relationships with key influences, and including key
  public/private stakeholders in their boards.  FALSE 
Firms can lessen political
  instability and adverse government actions risks by: competing in a range of
  geographic markets, developing stakeholder coalitions, cultivating
  relationships with key influences, and including key public/private
  stakeholders in their boards. | 
| 
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 | 
| 
24. | 
When
  U.S. currency appreciates against other currencies, U. S. goods can be less
  expensive to consumers in foreign countries.  FALSE 
Even a small change in the
  exchange rate can result in a significant difference in the cost of
  production or net profit when doing business overseas. When the U.S. dollar
  appreciates against other currencies, for example, U.S. goods can be more
  expensive to consumers in 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 | 
| 
25. | 
When
  the U.S. currency appreciates against other currencies, it becomes more
  expensive for American companies that have branch operations overseas, when
  they declare foreign profits in the United States.  TRUE 
Appreciation of the U.S.
  dollar can have negative implications for American companies that have branch
  operations overseas. The reason for this is that profits from abroad must be
  exchanged for dollars at a more expensive rate of exchange, reducing the
  amount of profit when measured in dollars. | 
| 
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 | 
| 
26. | 
Differences
  in foreign markets such as culture, language, and customs can represent
  significant management risks when firms enter foreign markets.  TRUE 
Management risks may be
  considered the challenges and risks that managers face when they must respond
  to the inevitable differences that they encounter in foreign markets. These
  take a variety of forms: culture, customs, language, income levels, customer
  preferences, distribution systems, and so on. | 
| 
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 | 
| 
27. | 
Offshoring
  takes place when a firm decides to shift an activity that they were
  previously performing in a domestic location to a foreign location.  TRUE 
Offshoring takes place when a
  firm decides to shift an activity that they were performing in a domestic
  location to a foreign location. For example, both Microsoft and Intel now
  have Research and Development facilities in India, employing a large number
  of Indian scientists and engineers. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember 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: 1 Easy Topic: International Expansion Company Motivations and Risks | 
| 
28. | 
Two
  opposing pressures that managers face when they compete in foreign markets
  are cost reduction and adaptation to local markets.  TRUE 
There are two opposing forces
  that firms face when they expand into global markets: cost reduction and
  adaptation to local markets. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 07-04 The two opposing forces-cost reduction and adaptation to local markets-that firms face when entering international markets. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
29. | 
Theodore
  Levitt, a marketing strategist, argued that people around the world are
  willing to sacrifice preferences in product features, functions, and design
  for lower prices and high quality.  TRUE 
Levitt advocated global
  product and brand strategies based on three assumptions: customer needs and
  interests are becoming increasingly homogeneous worldwide; people around the
  world are willing to sacrifice preferences in features, design, and the like
  for lower prices at high quality; substantial economies of scale in
  production and marketing can be achieved through supplying global markets. | 
| 
AACSB: Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-04 The two opposing forces-cost reduction and adaptation to local markets-that firms face when entering international markets. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
30. | 
Among
  Theodore Levitt's assumptions that would favor a global strategy is that
  consumers around the world are becoming less price-sensitive.  FALSE 
Levitt advocated global
  product and brand strategies based on three assumptions: customer needs and
  interests are becoming increasingly homogeneous worldwide; people around the
  world are willing to sacrifice preferences in features, design, and the like
  for lower prices at high quality; substantial economies of scale in production
  and marketing can be achieved through supplying global markets. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-04 The two opposing forces-cost reduction and adaptation to local markets-that firms face when entering international markets. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
31. | 
Within
  a worldwide market, the most effective strategies are neither purely
  multidomestic nor purely global.  TRUE 
All firms must balance the
  need to lower costs (where highly standardized products are preferred) with
  the need to be responsive to local pressures (where differentiating offerings
  is required). Most strategies incorporate some elements of both. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-04 The two opposing forces-cost reduction and adaptation to local markets-that firms face when entering international markets. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
32. | 
Industries
  in which proportionally more value is added in upstream activities are more
  likely to benefit from a global strategy than those in which more value is
  added downstream (closer to the customer).  TRUE 
Typically, primary activities
  that are downstream (e.g., marketing or service), or closer to the customer,
  require more decentralization to adapt to local market conditions (a
  multidomestic strategy). Upstream primary activities (e.g., logistics and
  operations) tend to be centralized (a global strategy) because there is less
  need for adapting them to local markets and the firm benefits from economies
  of scale. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-05 The advantages and disadvantages associated with each of the four basic strategies: international; global; multidomestic; and transnational. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
33. | 
In
  a global strategy a firm operates all of its businesses under a single common
  strategy, regardless of location.  TRUE 
With a global strategy,
  competitive strategy is centralized and controlled to a large extent by the
  corporate office. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 07-05 The advantages and disadvantages associated with each of the four basic strategies: international; global; multidomestic; and transnational. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
34. | 
A
  multidomestic strategy is the most appropriate strategy for international
  operations, because it drives economies of scale as far as possible and
  provides a middle-of-the-road product that appeals to the largest number of
  consumers in every market.  FALSE 
A firm whose emphasis is on
  differentiating its product and service offerings to adapt to local markets
  follows a multidomestic strategy. Decisions evolving from a multidomestic
  strategy tend to be decentralized to permit the firm to tailor its products
  and respond rapidly to changes in demand. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-05 The advantages and disadvantages associated with each of the four basic strategies: international; global; multidomestic; and transnational. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
35. | 
The
  need to attain economies of scale encourages multinational firms to operate
  under a multidomestic strategy.  FALSE 
A firm whose emphasis is on
  differentiating its product and service offerings to adapt to local markets
  follows a multidomestic strategy. This typically results in lower ability to
  leverage economies of scale and higher cost structures. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-05 The advantages and disadvantages associated with each of the four basic strategies: international; global; multidomestic; and transnational. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
36. | 
Corporations
  with multiple foreign operations that act very independently of one another
  are following a multidomestic strategy.  TRUE 
A firm whose emphasis is on
  differentiating its product and service offerings to adapt to local markets
  follows a multidomestic strategy. Decisions evolving from a multidomestic
  strategy tend to be decentralized to permit the firm to tailor its products
  and respond rapidly to changes in demand. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 07-05 The advantages and disadvantages associated with each of the four basic strategies: international; global; multidomestic; and transnational. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
37. | 
A
  multidomestic strategy would likely include the use of high volume,
  centralized production facilities to maximize economies of scale.  FALSE 
A firm whose emphasis is on
  differentiating its product and service offerings to adapt to local markets
  follows a multidomestic strategy. This typically results in lower ability to
  leverage economies of scale and higher cost structures. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 07-05 The advantages and disadvantages associated with each of the four basic strategies: international; global; multidomestic; and transnational. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
38. | 
A
  limitation of a multidomestic strategy is that it may lead to overadaptation
  as conditions change.  TRUE 
While the multidomestic
  strategy is based on adaptation to local conditions, the optimal degree of
  local adaptation evolves over time. Firms must recalibrate the need for local
  adaptation on an ongoing basis; excessive adaptation extracts a price as
  surely as under adaptation. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Understand Learning Objective: 07-05 The advantages and disadvantages associated with each of the four basic strategies: international; global; multidomestic; and transnational. Level of Difficulty: 2 Medium Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
39. | 
Multinational
  firms following a transnational strategy strive to optimize the trade-offs
  associated with efficiency, local adaptation, and learning.  TRUE 
A transnational strategy
  strives to optimize the trade-offs associated with efficiency, local adaptation,
  and learning. It seeks efficiency not for its own sake, but as a means to
  achieve global competitiveness. It recognizes the importance of local
  responsiveness but as a tool for flexibility in international operations. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 07-05 The advantages and disadvantages associated with each of the four basic strategies: international; global; multidomestic; and transnational. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
| 
40. | 
A
  key tenet of a transnational strategy is improved adaptation to all
  competitive situations as well as flexibility by capitalizing on
  communication and knowledge flows throughout the organization.  TRUE 
A central philosophy of the transnational
  organization is enhanced adaptation to all competitive situations as well as
  flexibility by capitalizing on communication and knowledge flows throughout
  the firm. A principal characteristic is the integration of unique
  contributions of all units into worldwide operations. | 
| 
AACSB:
  Analytic Blooms: Remember Learning Objective: 07-05 The advantages and disadvantages associated with each of the four basic strategies: international; global; multidomestic; and transnational. Level of Difficulty: 1 Easy Topic: Achieving Competitive Advantage in Global Markets | 
 
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