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©2004 Prentice Hall 6-1 Absolute Advantage Export those goods and services for which a country is more productive than other countries Import those goods and services for which other countries are more productive than it is

©2004 Prentice Hall6-1 Absolute Advantage Export those goods and services for which a country is more productive than other countries Import those

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©2004 Prentice Hall6-1

Absolute Advantage

Export those goods and services for which a country is more productive than other countries

Import those goods and services for which other countries are more productive than it is

©2004 Prentice Hall6-2

Table 6.1 The Theory of Absolute Advantage: An Example

Wine 2 1

Clock radios

3 5

France JapanOUTPUT PER HOUR OF LABOR

©2004 Prentice Hall6-3

Absolute Advantage’s Flaw

What happens to trade if one country has an absolute advantage in both products?

No trade would occur

©2004 Prentice Hall6-4

Comparative Advantage

Produce and export those goods and services for which it is relatively more productive than other countries

Import those goods and services for which other countries are relatively more productive than it is

©2004 Prentice Hall6-5

Differences between Comparative and Absolute Advantage

Absolute versus relative productivity differences

Comparative advantage incorporates the concept of opportunity cost– Value of what is given up to get the good

©2004 Prentice Hall6-6

Table 6.2 The Theory of Comparative Advantage: An Example

Wine 4 1

Clock radios

6 5

France JapanOUTPUT PER HOUR OF LABOR

9 4

116

©2004 Prentice Hall6-7

Table 6.2 The Theory of Comparative Advantage: An Example

Wine 5 4

Clock radios

6 5

France JapanOUTPUT PER HOUR OF LABOR

©2004 Prentice Hall6-8

Relative Factor Endowments

What determines the products for which a country will have a comparative advantage?– Factor endowments vary among countries

– Goods differ according to the types of factors that are used to produce them

©2004 Prentice Hall6-9

Relative Factor Endowments_2

A country will have a comparative advantage in producing products that intensively use resources (factors of production) it has in abundance– China: labor

– Saudi Arabia: oil

– Argentina: wheat

©2004 Prentice Hall6-10

Modern Firm-Based Trade Theories

Country Similarity Theory Product Life Cycle Theory Global Strategic Rivalry Theory Porter’s National Competitive

Advantage

©2004 Prentice Hall6-11

Country Similarity Theory

Explains the phenomenon of intraindustry trade– Trade between two countries of goods

produced by the same industry

• Japan exports Toyotas to Germany

• Germany exports BMWs to Japan

©2004 Prentice Hall6-12

Country Similarity Theory_2

Trade results from similarities of preferences among consumers in countries that are at the same stage of economic development

Most trade in manufactured goods should be between countries with similar per capita incomes

©2004 Prentice Hall6-13

Product Life Cycle Theory

Describes the evolution of marketing strategies

Stages– New product

– Maturing product

– Standardized product

©2004 Prentice Hall6-14

Figure 6.4 The International Product Life Cycle: Innovating Firm’s Country

©2004 Prentice Hall6-15

Figure 6.4 The International Product Life Cycle: Other Industrialized Countries

©2004 Prentice Hall6-16

Figure 6.4 The International Product Life Cycle: Less Developed Countries

©2004 Prentice Hall6-17

Global Strategic Rivalry Theory

Firms struggle to develop sustainable competitive advantage

Advantage provides ability to dominate global marketplace

Focus: strategic decisions firms use to compete internationally

©2004 Prentice Hall6-18

Sustaining Competitive Advantage

Owning intellectual property rights Investing in research and development Achieving economies of scale or scope Exploiting the experience curve

©2004 Prentice Hall6-19

Porter’s National Competitive Advantage

Success in trade comes from the interaction of four country and firm specific elements– Factor conditions

– Demand conditions

– Related and supporting industries

– Firm strategy, structure, and rivalry

©2004 Prentice Hall6-20

Figure 6.5 Porter’s Diamond of National Competitive Advantage

Firm Strategy, Structure,

and Rivalry

Related and SupportingIndustries

FactorConditions

DemandConditions

©2004 Prentice Hall6-21

The intense competitiveness

of Japanese market forces

manufacturers to continually

develop and fine-tune new products

©2004 Prentice Hall6-22

Figure 6.6 Theories of International Trade

Country-Based Theories Country is unit of analysis Emerged prior to WWII Developed by economists Explain interindustry trade Include

– Mercantilism– Absolute advantage– Comparative advantage– Relative factor endowments

Firm-Based Theories Firm is unit of analysis Emerged after WWII Developed by business school

professors Explain intraindustry trade Include

– Country similarity theory– Product life cycle– Global strategic rivalry– National competitive

advantage

©2004 Prentice Hall6-23

Types of International Investments

Does the investor seek an active management role in the firm or merely a return from a passive investment?– Foreign Direct Investment

– Portfolio Investment

©2004 Prentice Hall6-24

International Investment Theories

Ownership Advantages Internalization Dunning’s Eclectic Theory

©2004 Prentice Hall6-25

Ownership Advantages

A firm owning a valuable asset that creates a competitive advantage domestically can use that advantage to penetrate foreign markets through FDI

Why FDI and not other methods?

©2004 Prentice Hall6-26

Internalization Theory

FDI is more likely to occur when transaction costs with a second firm are high

Transaction costs: costs associated with negotiating, monitoring, and enforcing a contract

©2004 Prentice Hall6-27

Dunning’s Eclectic Theory

FDI reflects both international business activity and business activity internal to the firm

3 conditions for FDI– Ownership advantage

– Location advantage

– Internalization advantage

©2004 Prentice Hall6-28

Table 6.5 Factors Affecting the FDI Decision

Supply Factors Demand Factors Political Factors

Production costs Customer access Avoidance of trade barriers

Logistics Marketing advantages Economic development incentives

Resource availability Exploitation of competitive advantages

Access to technology Customer mobility