23
International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e By Lee H. Radebaugh and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e By Lee H. Radebaugh and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

  • View
    230

  • Download
    1

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

International Accountingand Multinational Enterprises 5/e

By Lee H. Radebaugh and Sidney J. Gray

PowerPoint Presentationby Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Page 2: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction or translation of this work beyond that permitted in Section 117 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act without the express written permission of the copyright owner is unlawful. Request for further information should be addressed to the Permissions Department, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. The purchaser may make back-up copies for his/her use only and not for distribution or resale. The publisher assumes no responsibility for errors, omissions, or damages, caused by the use of these programs or from the use of the information contained herein.

Page 3: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

International Accounting and International Business

Chapter One

Page 4: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

World Capital MarketsNorth America New York, San Francisco, Chicago,

Toronto

Asia Hong Kong, Tokyo

Australia Sydney

Europe London, Zurich, Frankfurt, Brussels,

Milan, Paris, Amsterdam, Stockholm, Madrid

South America Buenos Aires, Santiago, Mexico City

Africa Johannesburg

1

Page 5: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Historical Development of Accounting

Ancient World Mesopotamia, Egypt, India, China, Rome

Middle Ages Genoa, Florence, Venice

New World Maya, Inca, Aztec

2

Page 6: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Luca Pacioli (1445-1514)

Published Summa de Arithmetica in 1494

First published text on double-entry accounting

Introduced the “Memorandum Book,” “Journal,” and “Ledger”

3

Page 7: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

National Differences in Accounting Systems

Historical developments did not lead to uniformity in international accounting practice

Despite similarities, no two systems are exactly alike

Reasons for Differences: Economic, Educational, Legal, Political, and Social/ Cultural Factors 4

Page 8: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Implications of National Differences in Accounting

Acts as a barrier to the free-flow of international business information

5

Page 9: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Evolution and Significance of International Business

Greek Period First international sales of mass-produced

products through Greece in 5 B.C.

Roman Period First open market with political stability,

better transportation, and few tariffs or restrictions

Middle Ages Banking, Insurance, and trade fairs in

Byzantium6

Page 10: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

The Preindustrial Period

Europe: Rise of Mercantilism Right to trade regulated by the state, Colonialism driven by state’s direct

investment in colonies and near-monopolistic control of trade, and

Dominated by Western European Nations.

7

Page 11: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

The Industrialization Period: 1780-1945

Technological inventions led to unprecedented mass production and standardization,

Implementation of large-scale infrastructure between historically separate markets, and

Birth of large multinational corporations such as: Singer, Ford, Dunlop, and Lever Brothers.

8

Page 12: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

The Post-World War II Period

Great Depression and WWII stunted international trade

Following the end of the war, demand for products and services, trade and investment sharply increased.

9

Page 13: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

The Multinational Era

Involvement in International trade is essential for developing nations, and

For the continued economic growth of developed nations.

10

Page 14: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

What is International Business? All business transactions involving

two or more countries.

11

Page 15: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Reasons for International Involvement Expand sales, Gain access to raw materials and

other factors of production, and Obtain information, technical

expertise (i.e. patents, licenses, “know-how”).

12

Page 16: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Forms of International Involvement Exporting and Importing of goods

and services, Strategic alliances including

licensing agreements, franchises, and joint ventures, (McDonalds, Holiday Inn, Pizza Hut), and

Direct investment.

13

Page 17: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Global Enterprises

Multinational enterprises are those which:

Have a world-wide view of production, materials, components and final markets;

Have over 10% of sales, assets, earnings, and employees abroad.

14

Page 18: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Large MNE’s

Indicators: Sales and Market Value, Profits and Return on Shareholders

Equity, and Worldwide stock market

valuations.

15

Page 19: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

The Decision to Become Global: External Environment v. Internal Capabilities

Environmental Constraints-Domestic:

Educational, Sociological (Socioculteral), Political/ Legal, and Economic.

16

Environmental Constraints-International:

May differ from domestic constraints and mostly concerned with nationalism

Page 20: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Firm Specific Advantages

Intangibles that provide a unique firm advantage,

Examples include market-niche capabilities and personnel advantages.

17

Page 21: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Accounting Aspects of International Business

Accounting requirements differ with each successive stage of international involvement,

For example, import-export stage would require investigation of potential buyer or seller for purposes of determining credit-worthiness and capacity to perform.

Initial Issues may include: statements written in foreign language, amounts in foreign currencies, and information produced using different standards.

18

Page 22: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

Establishing an Internal International Accounting Capability

Increased international involvement requires: Internal accounting resources, Creation of separate organization to handle international

trade, and Creation of a foreign operation of some kind.

Degrees of Involvement: International accounting knowledge may be necessary

even with no direct international business involvement (I.e. company needs to borrow money or sell stock internationally).

19

Page 23: International Accounting and Multinational Enterprises 5/e  By Lee H. Radebaugh  and Sidney J. Gray PowerPoint Presentation by Kent W. Meyer, PhD

The Field of International Accounting

Increased need for accountants who understand the international accounting environment,

International certification possibilities, and Fascinating career opportunities.

20