University of
Washington Tacoma
GEOG 349:
Geography of International Trade
Winter 2013
REVIEW
QUESTIONS FOR SECOND
TEST
Refer to the instructor's
objectives for the course. For each
objective:
- Assess how well you've mastered that
capability .
- Identify what has helped you get to
your current level of capability.
Identify one objective on which you'd like to
work after the course is over. How might
you go about that?
Assets are
what an organization "owns" or at least invests
in and manages (like key employees). Environment is what an
organization can't
control -- except by choosing in what
environments it operates.
Though this section of the course is not as
theoretically oriented as the first section of
the course, the
overarching framework is that of making
organizational decisions that will maximize
returns to key organizational assets, and that
will strengthen those assets.
These are the essential goals of corporate
strategy, business
(or competitive) strategy, and functional
strategies. These are also important
to determining the appropriate form
of international business: you have
to know what your core
asset is before you can determine whether
licensing or contracting production are
reasonable alternatives to exporting or
FDI. (Of course, regulations and barriers
you face from your home country or a host
country will play a role in this decision, as
well). Finally, identifying unique assets
is the first step in applying the OLI
(or "eclectic") model to decisions whether
to engage in FDI. [You should be able to
apply the OLI model to "explain" a firm's choice
of international business form.]
Identification of an organization's unique or
key assets is an important part in determining
the location
and
organization
of
procurement
and
production. Organizations generally
want to own operations that are part of their
core assets, but may contract other operations
-- sometimes within a stable network of
providers, sometimes by selecting the best deal
in the open market. International
differences in trade barriers and feasibility of
FDI will also affect these decisions, and affect
the decisions where to engage in what sorts of
operations. Use the examples in this
moderately complex table
to help you understand some of these
contingencies.
International
marketing is an important example of a
functional strategy in the international arena.
What are the six
components of an international marketing plan?
I've emphasized that the decisions for each
component must support the decisions for all the
other components, and must be a function of the
roles that international marketing play in the
organization's overall business strategy --
which is based in part on the nature of the
organization's strategic assets (a.k.a.
organization-specific advantage). Be able
to play with these components: if I
provide a basic scenario (sector, size of
organization, and its key assets or advantages),
you should be able to create a quick-and-dirty
marketing plan in which all the elements work
together.
Why should a firm or other organization, which
operates almost entirely in one country, hedge
its
exposure
to
foreign
exchange
risk? How can an exporter avoid
exchange risk, given the choices in
international payments?
Be able to define key
export
documents. What are the key
variables
and choices in payment for exports?
Which are more advantageous for the
exporter? What determines which choices
are made in a given export arrangement?
What are the additional costs that an exporter
faces (beyond the costs of design, procurement,
production and its domestic marketing) -- i.e.,
the costs that need to be considered when it
establishes its export price? If adding
these costs raise a company's export price
beyond competitive levels in a foreign country,
suggest two reasons why a company might decide
to absorb some of these costs to win an export
contract.
Be able to apply the principles of strategic
management to a hypothetical case: given a
set of assets and capabilities that distinguish
a particular firm from its (real and potential)
competitors, suggest how, and where it should
engage in exporting and/or FDI, and how it
should manage key aspects of its supply
chain: from where should it obtain key
inputs, should it own or contract for those
inputs, should it own downstream (closer to the
final user) activities (where?). Think
about the impact of import barriers and
differential tax rates.
What have been the major impacts of trade
liberalization and inward FDI on key regions
(plural) in "your" country (Canada, China, or
Mexico)? Why -- what are the key
characteristics of those regions that have led
to those impacts? Be able to use (a) basic
trade theory (specialization according to
comparative advantage, comparative advantage
based on factor proportions, and the consequent
impacts on abundant versus scarce factors) and
(b) basic geographic considerations (location of
factors, location of markets) to explain these
regional impacts.
How has the product life cycle changed in recent
years, according to Fishman?
What's led to those changes? What do you
think creates limits to the "insourcing" trend?
What are three main findings of Lori Kletzer's
study of the impacts of trade on US labor?
What two policy measures does she suggest to
help ameliorate the negative impacts?
What "core
labor standards" does Elliott
propose? How do these differ from "cash
labor standards"? Explain three ways in
which core labor standards could be enforced
internationally, even though national
governments are sovereign.
What can (a) national governments, (b)
international agreements, and (c) labor
organizations do to mitigate the negative impacts of trade
liberalization on particular groups of labor?
Think about this from the perspective of "your"
country and from the perspective of the US.
Esty identifies three components of the
relationship between economic growth and
environmental degradation: technique,
composition, and scale. Describe and give
an example of each. What is the
environmental Kuznets curve? What leads to
that pattern (if the pattern does really exist)?
What are the major points in The Economist's
article on national sovereignty under trade
liberalization? Do you agree with
the major points?
Identify three reasons why
a company might engage in FDI.
Identify three reasons why
a government might make concessions to attract
inward FDI. Suggest six points
of negotiation between MNCs and national
or provincial governments regarding proposed
inward FDI. What characteristics would
strengthen each side in negotiations? How
might outward FDI benefit a country
(i.e.,the country of the parent company)?
copyright James W.
Harrington, Jr.
revised 8
March 2013
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