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Internationalization

In economics, internationalization or internationalisation is the process of increasing involvement of enterprises in international markets, although there is no agreed definition of internationalization.[1] Internationalization is a crucial strategy not only for companies that seek horizontal integration globally but also for countries that addresses the sustainability of its development in different manufacturing as well as service sectors especially in higher education which is a very important context that needs internationalization to bridge the gap between different cultures and countries.[2] There are several internationalization theories which try to explain why there are international activities.

Entrepreneurs and enterprises edit

Those entrepreneurs who are interested in the field of internationalization of business need to possess the ability to think globally and have an understanding of international cultures. By appreciating and understanding different beliefs, values, behaviors and business strategies of a variety of companies within other countries, entrepreneurs will be able to internationalize successfully. Entrepreneurs must also have an ongoing concern for innovation, maintaining a high level of quality, be committed to corporate social responsibility, and continue to strive to provide the best business strategies and either goods or services possible while adapting to different countries and cultures.

Trade theories edit

Absolute cost advantage (Adam Smith, 1776) edit

Adam Smith claimed that a country should specialise in, and export, commodities in which it had an absolute advantage.[3] An absolute advantage existed when the country could produce a commodity with less costs per unit produced than could its trading partner.[3] By the same reasoning, it should import commodities in which it had an absolute disadvantage.[3]

While there are possible gains from trade with absolute advantage, comparative advantage extends the range of possible mutually beneficial exchanges. In other words, it is not necessary to have an absolute advantage to gain from trade, only a comparative advantage.

Comparative cost advantage (David Ricardo, 1817) edit

David Ricardo argued that a country does not need to have an absolute advantage in the production of any commodity for international trade between it and another country to be mutually beneficial.[4] Absolute advantage meant greater efficiency in production, or the use of less labor factor in production.[4] Two countries could both benefit from trade if each had a relative advantage in production.[4] Relative advantage simply meant that the ratio of the labor embodied in the two commodities differed between two countries, such that each country would have at least one commodity where the relative amount of labor embodied would be less than that of the other country.[4]

Gravity model of trade (Walter Isard, 1954) edit

The gravity model of trade in international economics, similar to other gravity models in social science, predicts bilateral trade flows based on the economic sizes of (often using GDP measurements) and distance between two units. The basic theoretical model for trade between two countries takes the form of:

 

with:

 : Trade flow
 : Country i and j
 : Economic mass, for example GDP
 : Distance
 : Constant

The model has also been used in international relations to evaluate the impact of treaties and alliances on trade, and it has been used to test the effectiveness of trade agreements and organizations such as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the World Trade Organization (WTO).

Heckscher–Ohlin model (Eli Heckscher, 1966 & Bertil Ohlin, 1952) edit

The Heckscher–Ohlin model (H–O model), also known as the factors proportions development, is a general equilibrium mathematical model of international trade, developed by Eli Heckscher and Bertil Ohlin at the Stockholm School of Economics. It builds on David Ricardo's theory of comparative advantage by predicting patterns of commerce and production based on the factor endowments of a trading region. The model essentially says that countries will export products that utilize their abundant and cheap factor(s) of production and import products that utilize the countries' scarce factor(s).[5]

The results of this work have been the formulation of certain named conclusions arising from the assumptions inherent in the model. These are known as:

Leontief paradox (Wassily Leontief, 1954) edit

Leontief's paradox in economics is that the country with the world's highest capital-per worker has a lower capital:labour ratio in exports than in imports.

This econometric find was the result of Professor Wassily W. Leontief's attempt to test the Heckscher-Ohlin theory empirically. In 1954, Leontief found that the U.S. (the most capital-abundant country in the world by any criteria) exported labor-intensive commodities and imported capital-intensive commodities, in contradiction with Heckscher-Ohlin theory.

Linder hypothesis (Staffan Burenstam Linder, 1961) edit

The Linder hypothesis (demand-structure hypothesis) is a conjecture in economics about international trade patterns. The hypothesis is that the more similar are the demand structures of countries the more they will trade with one another. Further, international trade will still occur between two countries having identical preferences and factor endowments (relying on specialization to create a comparative advantage in the production of differentiated goods between the two nations).

Location theory edit

Location theory is concerned with the geographic location of economic activity; it has become an integral part of economic geography, regional science, and spatial economics. Location theory addresses the questions of what economic activities are located where and why. Location theory rests — like microeconomic theory generally — on the assumption that agents act in their own self-interest. Thus firms choose locations that maximize their profits and individuals choose locations, that maximize their utility.

Market imperfection theory (Stephen Hymer, 1976 & Charles P. Kindleberger, 1969 & Richard E. Caves, 1971) edit

In economics, a market failure is a situation wherein the allocation of production or use of goods and services by the free market is not efficient. Market failures can be viewed as scenarios where individuals' pursuit of pure self-interest leads to results that can be improved upon from the societal point of view.[6] The first known use of the term by economists was in 1958,[7] but the concept has been traced back to the Victorian philosopher Henry Sidgwick.[8]

Market imperfection can be defined as anything that interferes with trade.[9] This includes two dimensions of imperfections.[9] First, imperfections cause a rational market participant to deviate from holding the market portfolio.[9] Second, imperfections cause a rational market participant to deviate from his preferred risk level.[9] Market imperfections generate costs which interfere with trades that rational individuals make (or would make in the absence of the imperfection).[9]

The idea that multinational corporations (MNEs) owe their existence to market imperfections was first put forward by Stephen Hymer, Charles P. Kindleberger and Caves.[10] The market imperfections they had in mind were, however, structural imperfections in markets for final products.[11]

According to Hymer, market imperfections are structural, arising from structural deviations from perfect competition in the final product market due to exclusive and permanent control of proprietary technology, privileged access to inputs, scale economies, control of distribution systems, and product differentiation,[12] but in their absence markets are perfectly efficient.[11]

By contrast, the insight of transaction costs theories of the MNEs, simultaneously and independently developed in the 1970s by McManus (1972), Buckley and Casson (1976), Brown (1976) and Hennart (1977, 1982), is that market imperfections are inherent attributes of markets, and MNEs are institutions to bypass these imperfections.[11] Markets experience natural imperfections, i.e. imperfections that are because the implicit neoclassical assumptions of perfect knowledge and perfect enforcement are not realized.[13]

New Trade Theory edit

New Trade Theory (NTT) is the economic critique of international free trade from the perspective of increasing returns to scale and the network effect. Some economists have asked whether it might be effective for a nation to shelter infant industries until they had grown to a sufficient size large enough to compete internationally.

New Trade theorists challenge the assumption of diminishing returns to scale, and some argue that using protectionist measures to build up a huge industrial base in certain industries will then allow those sectors to dominate the world market (via a network effect).

Specific factors model edit

In this model, labour mobility between industries is possible while capital is immobile between industries in the short-run. Thus, this model can be interpreted as a 'short run' version of the Heckscher-Ohlin model.

Traditional approaches edit

 
The Porter diamond[14]

Diamond model (Michael Porter) edit

The diamond model is an economical model developed by Michael Porter in his book The Competitive Advantage of Nations, where he published his theory of why particular industries become competitive in particular locations.[15]

The diamond model consists of six factors:[15]

  • Factor conditions
  • Demand conditions
  • Related and supporting industries
  • Firm strategy, structure and rivalry
  • Government
  • Chance

The Porter thesis is that these factors interact with each other to create conditions where innovation and improved competitiveness occurs.[15]

Diffusion of innovations (Rogers, 1962) edit

Diffusion of innovation is a theory of how, why, and at what rate new ideas and technology spread through cultures. Everett Rogers introduced it in his 1962 book, Diffusion of Innovations, writing that "Diffusion is the process by which an innovation is communicated through certain channels over time among the members of a social system."[16]

Eclectic paradigm (John H. Dunning) edit

The eclectic paradigm is a theory in economics and is also known as the OLI-Model.[17][18] It is a further development of the theory of internalization and published by John H. Dunning in 1993.[19] The theory of internalization itself is based on the transaction cost theory.[19] This theory says that transactions are made within an institution if the transaction costs on the free market are higher than the internal costs. This process is called internalization.[19]

For Dunning, not only the structure of organization is important.[19] He added three additional factors to the theory:[19]

  • Ownership advantages[17] (trademark, production technique, entrepreneurial skills, returns to scale)[18]
  • Locational advantages (existence of raw materials, low wages, special taxes or tariffs)[18]
  • Internalisation advantages (advantages by producing through a partnership arrangement such as licensing or a joint venture)[18]

Foreign direct investment theory edit

Foreign direct investment (FDI) in its classic form is defined as a company from one country making a physical investment into building a factory in another country. It is the establishment of an enterprise by a foreigner.[20] Its definition can be extended to include investments made to acquire lasting interest in enterprises operating outside of the economy of the investor.[21] The FDI relationship consists of a parent enterprise and a foreign affiliate which together form a multinational corporation (MNC). In order to qualify as FDI the investment must afford the parent enterprise control over its foreign affiliate. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) defines control in this case as owning 10% or more of the ordinary shares or voting power of an incorporated firm or its equivalent for an unincorporated firm; lower ownership shares are known as portfolio investment.[22]

Monopolistic advantage theory (Stephen Hymer) edit

The monopolistic advantage theory is an approach in international business which explains why firms can compete in foreign settings against indigenous competitors[23] and is frequently associated with the seminal contribution of Stephen Hymer.[24]

Prior to Stephen Hymer’s doctoral thesis, The International Operations of National Firms: A Study of foreign direct Investment, theories did not adequately explain why firms engaged in foreign operations. Hymer started his research by analyzing the motivations behind foreign investment of US corporations in other countries. Neoclassical theories, dominant at the time, explained foreign direct investments as capital movements across borders based on perceived benefits from interest rates in other markets, there was no need to separate them from any other kind of investment (Ietto-Guilles, 2012).

He effectively differentiated Foreign Direct Investment and portfolio investments by including the notion of control of foreign firms to FDI Theory, which implies control of the operation; whilst portfolio foreign investment confers a share of ownership but not control. Stephen Hymer focused on and considered FDI and MNE as part of the theory of the firm. (Hymer, 1976: 21)

He also dismissed the assumption that FDIs are motivated by the search of low costs in foreign countries, by emphasizing the fact that local firms are not able to compete effectively against foreign firms, even though they have to face foreign barriers (cultural, political, lingual etc.) to market entry. He suggested that firms invest in foreign countries in order to maximize their specific firm advantages in imperfect markets, that is, markets where the flow of information is uneven and allows companies to benefit from a competitive advantage over the local competition.

Stephen Hymer also suggested a second determinant for firms engaging in foreign operations, removal of conflicts. When a rival company is operating in a foreign market or is willing to enter one, a conflict situation arises. Through FDI, a multinational can share or take complete control of foreign production, effectively removing conflict. This will lead to the increase of market power for the specific firm, increasing imperfections in the market as a whole (Ietto-Guilles, 2012)

A final determinant for multinationals making direct investments is the distribution of risk through diversification. By choosing different markets and production locations, the risk inherent to foreign operations are spread and reduced.

All of these motivations for FDI are built on market imperfections and conflict. A firm engaging in direct investment could then reduce competition, eliminate the conflicts and exploit the firm specific advantages making them capable of succeeding in a foreign market.

Stephen Hymer can be considered the father of international business because he effectively studied multinationals from a different perspective than the existing literature, by approaching multinationals as national companies with international operations, regarded as expansions from home operations. He analyzed the activities of the MNEs and their impact on the economy, gave an explanation for the large flow of foreign investments by US corporations at a time where they were incomplete, and envisioned the ethical conflicts that could arise from the increase in power of MNEs.

Non-availability approach (Irving B. Kravis, 1956) edit

The non-availability explains international trade by the fact that each country imports the goods that are not available at home.[25] This unavailability may be due to lack of natural resources (oil, gold, etc.: this is absolute unavailability) or to the fact that the goods cannot be produced domestically, or could only be produced at prohibitive costs (for technological or other reasons): this is relative unavailability.[26] On the other hand, each country exports the goods that are available at home.[26]

Technology gap theory of trade (Michael Posner) edit

The technology gap theory describes an advantage enjoyed by the country that introduces new goods in a market. As a consequence of research activity and entrepreneurship, new goods are produced and the innovating country enjoys a monopoly until the other countries learn to produce these goods: in the meantime they have to import them. Thus, international trade is created for the time necessary to imitate the new goods (imitation lag).[25]

Uppsala model edit

The Uppsala model[27] is a theory that explains how firms gradually intensify their activities in foreign markets.[28] It is similar to the POM model.[29] The key features of both models are the following: firms first gain experience from the domestic market before they move to foreign markets; firms start their foreign operations from culturally and/or geographically close countries and move gradually to culturally and geographically more distant countries; firms start their foreign operations by using traditional exports and gradually move to using more intensive and demanding operation modes (sales subsidiaries etc.) both at the company and target country level.[30]

Updated Uppsala model edit

The Updated Uppsala model[31] is a further progression of the original Uppsala model. Like the Uppsala model, the Updated Uppsala model is a theory that explains firm internationalization as a process of gradual commitment. However, instead of an increased commitment to other markets, the theory posits that firms commit to business networks.[32] Firms thereby utilize the established relationships with other firms to internationalize within their network, e.g. by localizing production at a foreign production site of the client.[33]

Learning portal model edit

The Learning Portal Model [34] is a new theory that was originally developed to explain the emergence and catch-up of multinational firms from the emerging markets. The theory explains that latecomer firms (from both, advanced and emerging markets) can use springboarding strategies to leapfrog certain technological development stages and accelerate their catch‐up with incumbent leading firms in their industry. To do so, the catching-up firms establish learning portals in knowledge hubs to acquire knowledge and assets, which they exploit to compete in global markets.

Further theories edit

Contingency theory edit

Contingency theory refers to any of a number of management theories. Several contingency approaches were developed concurrently in the late 1960s. They suggested that previous theories such as Weber's bureaucracy and Frederick Winslow Taylor's scientific management had failed because they neglected that management style and organizational structure were influenced by various aspects of the environment: the contingency factors. There could not be "one best way" for leadership or organization.

Contract theory edit

In economics, contract theory studies how economic actors can and do construct contractual arrangements, generally in the presence of asymmetric information. Contract theory is closely connected to the field of law and economics. One prominent field of application is managerial compensation.

Economy of scale edit

Economies of scale, in microeconomics, are the cost advantages that a business obtains due to expansion. They are factors that cause a producer’s average cost per unit to fall as output rises.[35] Diseconomies of scale are the opposite. Economies of scale may be utilized by any size firm expanding its scale of operation.

Internalisation theory (Peter J. Buckley & Mark Casson, 1976; Rugman, 1981) edit

Product life-cycle theory edit

As first articulated by Raymond Vernon in 1966, a product goes through a life cycle consisting of four stages: "new product", "growth product", "maturity product" and "obsolescence product". The conditions in which a product is sold change over time and must be managed as it moves through this succession of stages. This is called product life cycle management. [36]

Transaction cost theory edit

The theory of the firm consists of a number of economic theories which describe the nature of the firm, company, or corporation, including its existence, its behaviour, and its relationship with the market.

Ronald Coase set out his transaction cost theory of the firm in 1937, making it one of the first (neo-classical) attempts to define the firm theoretically in relation to the market.[37] Coase sets out to define a firm in a manner which is both realistic and compatible with the idea of substitution at the margin, so instruments of conventional economic analysis apply. He notes that a firm’s interactions with the market may not be under its control (for instance because of sales taxes), but its internal allocation of resources are: “Within a firm, ... market transactions are eliminated and in place of the complicated market structure with exchange transactions is substituted the entrepreneur ... who directs production.” He asks why alternative methods of production (such as the price mechanism and economic planning), could not either achieve all production, so that either firms use internal prices for all their production, or one big firm runs the entire economy.

Theory of the growth of the firm (Edith Penrose, 1959) edit

While at Johns Hopkins, Penrose participated in a research project on the growth of firms. She came to the conclusion that the existing theory of the firm was inadequate to explain how firms grow. Her insight was to realise that the 'Firm' in theory is not the same thing as 'flesh and blood' organizations that businessmen call firms. This insight eventually led to the publication of her second book, The Theory of the Growth of the Firm in 1959.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Susman, Gerald I. (2007). Small and Medium-sized Enterprises and the Global Economy. Young et al., 2003. Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 281. ISBN 978-1-84542-595-1.
  2. ^ Adel, H. M.; Zeinhom, G. A.; Mahrous, A. A. (2018). "Effective management of an internationalization strategy: A case study on Egyptian–British universities' partnerships". International Journal of Technology Management & Sustainable Development. 17 (2): 183–202. doi:10.1386/tmsd.17.2.183_1. S2CID 159384176.
  3. ^ a b c Ingham, Barbara (2004). International economics: a European focus. Pearson Education. p. 336. ISBN 0-273-65507-8.
  4. ^ a b c d Hunt, E. K. (2002). History of economic thought: A critical perspective. M.E. Sharpe. p. 120. ISBN 0-7656-0607-0.
  5. ^ Blaug, Mark (1992). The methodology of economics, or, How economists explain. Cambridge University Press. p. 190. ISBN 0-521-43678-8.
  6. ^ Krugman, Paul, Wells, Robin, Economics, Worth Publishers, New York, (2006)
  7. ^ Bator, Francis M. (August 1958). "The Anatomy of Market Failure". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 72 (3). The MIT Press: 351–379. doi:10.2307/1882231. JSTOR 1882231.
  8. ^ Medema, Steven G. (July 2004). "Mill, Sidgwick, and the Evolution of the Theory of Market Failure" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-06-23.
  9. ^ a b c d e DeGennaro, Ramon P. (December 2005). (PDF). Working Paper. Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta - Working Paper Series. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-04-01. Retrieved 2009-03-17.
  10. ^ Pitelis, Christos; Roger Sugden (2000). The nature of the transnational firm. Hymer (1960, published in 1976), Kindleberger (1969) & Caves (1971). Routledge. p. 74. ISBN 0-415-16787-6.
  11. ^ a b c Pitelis, Christos; Roger Sugden (2000). The nature of the transnational firm. Routledge. p. 224. ISBN 0-415-16787-6.
  12. ^ Pitelis, Christos; Roger Sugden (2000). The nature of the transnational firm. Bain (1956). Routledge. p. 74. ISBN 0-415-16787-6.
  13. ^ Pitelis, Christos; Roger Sugden (2000). The nature of the transnational firm. Dunning & Rugman (1985), Teece (1981). Routledge. p. 74. ISBN 0-415-16787-6.
  14. ^ Traill, Bruce; Eamonn Pitts (1998). Competitiveness in the Food Industry. Porter (1990, p. 127). Springer. p. 19. ISBN 0-7514-0431-4.
  15. ^ a b c Traill, Bruce; Eamonn Pitts (1998). Competitiveness in the Food Industry. Springer. p. 301. ISBN 0-7514-0431-4.
  16. ^ Rogers, Everett M. (2003).Diffusion of Innovations, 5th ed.. New York, NY: Free Press.
  17. ^ a b Hagen, Antje (1997). Deutsche Direktinvestitionen in Grossbritannien, 1871–1918 (Dissertation) (in German). Jena: Franz Steiner Verlag. p. 32. ISBN 3-515-07152-0.
  18. ^ a b c d Twomey, Michael J. (2000). A Century of Foreign Investment in the Third World (Book). Routledge. p. 8. ISBN 0-415-23360-7.
  19. ^ a b c d e Falkenhahn, Alexander; Roman Stanslowski (2001-11-27). "Das Eklektische Paradigma des John Dunning" (PDF). Seminar paper (in German). Retrieved 2009-02-19.[permanent dead link]
  20. ^ O'Sullivan, Arthur; Sheffrin, Steven M. (2003). Economics: Principles in Action. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458: Pearson Prentice Hall. p. 551. ISBN 0-13-063085-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  21. ^ Foreign Direct Investment, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, www.unctad.org
  22. ^ International Monetary Fund, 1993. Balance of Payments Manual, fifth edition (Washington, D.C.)
  23. ^ Bürgel, Oliver (2000). The internationalisation of British start-up companies in high-technology industries. Springer (Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung). p. 48. ISBN 3-7908-1292-7.
  24. ^ Bürgel, Oliver (2000). The internationalisation of British start-up companies in high-technology industries. Hymer (1976); Hymer's original thesis was completed in 1960, but it was only after his death, in 1976, that it was published by the MIT. By that time, his ideas had already found widespread acceptance. Springer (Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung). p. 48. ISBN 3-7908-1292-7.
  25. ^ a b Gandolfo, Giancarlo (1998). International Trade Theory and Policy: With 12 Tables. Irving B. Kravis (1956). Springer. pp. 233–234. ISBN 3-540-64316-8.
  26. ^ a b Gandolfo, Giancarlo (1998). International Trade Theory and Policy: With 12 Tables. Springer. p. 544. ISBN 3-540-64316-8.
  27. ^ Elgar, Edward (2003). Learning in the Internationalisation Process of Firms. Johanson & Wiedersheim-Paul (1975), Johanson & Vahlne (1977). p. 261. ISBN 1-84064-662-4. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  28. ^ Blomstermo, Anders; Dharma Deo Sharma (2003). Learning in the internationalisation process of firms. Edward Elgar. pp. 36–53. ISBN 978-1-84064-662-7.
  29. ^ Elgar, Edward (2003). Learning in the Internationalisation Process of Firms. Luostarinen (1979). p. 261. ISBN 1-84064-662-4. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  30. ^ Elgar, Edward (2003). Learning in the Internationalisation Process of Firms. p. 261. ISBN 1-84064-662-4. Retrieved 2009-03-21.
  31. ^ Johanson, J.; Vahlne, J.-E. (2009). "The Uppsala internationalization process model revisited: From liability of foreignness to liability of outsidership". Journal of International Business Studies. 40 (9): 1411–1431. doi:10.1057/jibs.2009.24. S2CID 17711333. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  32. ^ Johanson, J.; Vahlne, J.-E. (2013). "The Uppsala model on evolution of the multinational business enterprise: From internalization to coordination of networks". International Marketing Review. 30 (3): 189–210. doi:10.1108/02651331311321963. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  33. ^ Hertenstein, P.; Sutherland, D.; Anderson, J. (2017). "Internationalization within networks: Exploring the relationship between inward and outward FDI in China's auto components industry". Asia Pacific Journal of Management. 34: 69–96. doi:10.1007/s10490-015-9422-3. S2CID 55924013. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
  34. ^ Hertenstein, P.; Alon, I. (2021). "A learning portal model of emerging markets multinationals". Global Strategy Journal. 12: 134–162. doi:10.1002/gsj.1400.
  35. ^ O'Sullivan, Arthur; Sheffrin, Steven M. (2003). Economics: Principles in Action. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey 07458: Pearson Prentice Hall. p. 157. ISBN 0-13-063085-3.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  36. ^ Vernon, Raymond (1966). "International Investment and International Trade in the Product Cycle. in: Quarterly Journal of Economics". Quarterly Journal of Economics. Cambridge: 191. ISSN 0033-5533.[permanent dead link]
  37. ^ Coase, Ronald H., "The Nature of the Firm", Economica 4, pp 386–405, 1937.

internationalization, term, computing, localization, economics, internationalization, internationalisation, process, increasing, involvement, enterprises, international, markets, although, there, agreed, definition, internationalization, crucial, strategy, onl. For the term in computing see Internationalization and localization In economics internationalization or internationalisation is the process of increasing involvement of enterprises in international markets although there is no agreed definition of internationalization 1 Internationalization is a crucial strategy not only for companies that seek horizontal integration globally but also for countries that addresses the sustainability of its development in different manufacturing as well as service sectors especially in higher education which is a very important context that needs internationalization to bridge the gap between different cultures and countries 2 There are several internationalization theories which try to explain why there are international activities Contents 1 Entrepreneurs and enterprises 2 Trade theories 2 1 Absolute cost advantage Adam Smith 1776 2 2 Comparative cost advantage David Ricardo 1817 2 3 Gravity model of trade Walter Isard 1954 2 4 Heckscher Ohlin model Eli Heckscher 1966 amp Bertil Ohlin 1952 2 5 Leontief paradox Wassily Leontief 1954 2 6 Linder hypothesis Staffan Burenstam Linder 1961 2 7 Location theory 2 8 Market imperfection theory Stephen Hymer 1976 amp Charles P Kindleberger 1969 amp Richard E Caves 1971 2 9 New Trade Theory 2 10 Specific factors model 3 Traditional approaches 3 1 Diamond model Michael Porter 3 2 Diffusion of innovations Rogers 1962 3 3 Eclectic paradigm John H Dunning 3 4 Foreign direct investment theory 3 5 Monopolistic advantage theory Stephen Hymer 3 6 Non availability approach Irving B Kravis 1956 3 7 Technology gap theory of trade Michael Posner 3 8 Uppsala model 3 9 Updated Uppsala model 3 10 Learning portal model 4 Further theories 4 1 Contingency theory 4 2 Contract theory 4 3 Economy of scale 4 4 Internalisation theory Peter J Buckley amp Mark Casson 1976 Rugman 1981 4 5 Product life cycle theory 4 6 Transaction cost theory 4 7 Theory of the growth of the firm Edith Penrose 1959 5 See also 6 ReferencesEntrepreneurs and enterprises editThose entrepreneurs who are interested in the field of internationalization of business need to possess the ability to think globally and have an understanding of international cultures By appreciating and understanding different beliefs values behaviors and business strategies of a variety of companies within other countries entrepreneurs will be able to internationalize successfully Entrepreneurs must also have an ongoing concern for innovation maintaining a high level of quality be committed to corporate social responsibility and continue to strive to provide the best business strategies and either goods or services possible while adapting to different countries and cultures Trade theories editAbsolute cost advantage Adam Smith 1776 edit Main article Absolute advantage Adam Smith claimed that a country should specialise in and export commodities in which it had an absolute advantage 3 An absolute advantage existed when the country could produce a commodity with less costs per unit produced than could its trading partner 3 By the same reasoning it should import commodities in which it had an absolute disadvantage 3 While there are possible gains from trade with absolute advantage comparative advantage extends the range of possible mutually beneficial exchanges In other words it is not necessary to have an absolute advantage to gain from trade only a comparative advantage Comparative cost advantage David Ricardo 1817 edit Main articles Comparative advantage and Ricardian economics David Ricardo argued that a country does not need to have an absolute advantage in the production of any commodity for international trade between it and another country to be mutually beneficial 4 Absolute advantage meant greater efficiency in production or the use of less labor factor in production 4 Two countries could both benefit from trade if each had a relative advantage in production 4 Relative advantage simply meant that the ratio of the labor embodied in the two commodities differed between two countries such that each country would have at least one commodity where the relative amount of labor embodied would be less than that of the other country 4 Gravity model of trade Walter Isard 1954 edit Main article Gravity model of trade The gravity model of trade in international economics similar to other gravity models in social science predicts bilateral trade flows based on the economic sizes of often using GDP measurements and distance between two units The basic theoretical model for trade between two countries takes the form of Fij GMiMjDij displaystyle F ij G frac M i M j D ij nbsp with F displaystyle F nbsp Trade flowi j displaystyle i j nbsp Country i and jM displaystyle M nbsp Economic mass for example GDPD displaystyle D nbsp DistanceG displaystyle G nbsp ConstantThe model has also been used in international relations to evaluate the impact of treaties and alliances on trade and it has been used to test the effectiveness of trade agreements and organizations such as the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA and the World Trade Organization WTO Heckscher Ohlin model Eli Heckscher 1966 amp Bertil Ohlin 1952 edit Main article Heckscher Ohlin model The Heckscher Ohlin model H O model also known as the factors proportions development is a general equilibrium mathematical model of international trade developed by Eli Heckscher and Bertil Ohlin at the Stockholm School of Economics It builds on David Ricardo s theory of comparative advantage by predicting patterns of commerce and production based on the factor endowments of a trading region The model essentially says that countries will export products that utilize their abundant and cheap factor s of production and import products that utilize the countries scarce factor s 5 The results of this work have been the formulation of certain named conclusions arising from the assumptions inherent in the model These are known as Heckscher Ohlin theorem Rybczynski theorem Stolper Samuelson theorem Factor Price Equalization theoremLeontief paradox Wassily Leontief 1954 edit Main article Leontief paradox Leontief s paradox in economics is that the country with the world s highest capital per worker has a lower capital labour ratio in exports than in imports This econometric find was the result of Professor Wassily W Leontief s attempt to test the Heckscher Ohlin theory empirically In 1954 Leontief found that the U S the most capital abundant country in the world by any criteria exported labor intensive commodities and imported capital intensive commodities in contradiction with Heckscher Ohlin theory Linder hypothesis Staffan Burenstam Linder 1961 edit Main article Linder hypothesis The Linder hypothesis demand structure hypothesis is a conjecture in economics about international trade patterns The hypothesis is that the more similar are the demand structures of countries the more they will trade with one another Further international trade will still occur between two countries having identical preferences and factor endowments relying on specialization to create a comparative advantage in the production of differentiated goods between the two nations Location theory edit Main article Location theory Location theory is concerned with the geographic location of economic activity it has become an integral part of economic geography regional science and spatial economics Location theory addresses the questions of what economic activities are located where and why Location theory rests like microeconomic theory generally on the assumption that agents act in their own self interest Thus firms choose locations that maximize their profits and individuals choose locations that maximize their utility Market imperfection theory Stephen Hymer 1976 amp Charles P Kindleberger 1969 amp Richard E Caves 1971 edit Main article Market failure In economics a market failure is a situation wherein the allocation of production or use of goods and services by the free market is not efficient Market failures can be viewed as scenarios where individuals pursuit of pure self interest leads to results that can be improved upon from the societal point of view 6 The first known use of the term by economists was in 1958 7 but the concept has been traced back to the Victorian philosopher Henry Sidgwick 8 Market imperfection can be defined as anything that interferes with trade 9 This includes two dimensions of imperfections 9 First imperfections cause a rational market participant to deviate from holding the market portfolio 9 Second imperfections cause a rational market participant to deviate from his preferred risk level 9 Market imperfections generate costs which interfere with trades that rational individuals make or would make in the absence of the imperfection 9 The idea that multinational corporations MNEs owe their existence to market imperfections was first put forward by Stephen Hymer Charles P Kindleberger and Caves 10 The market imperfections they had in mind were however structural imperfections in markets for final products 11 According to Hymer market imperfections are structural arising from structural deviations from perfect competition in the final product market due to exclusive and permanent control of proprietary technology privileged access to inputs scale economies control of distribution systems and product differentiation 12 but in their absence markets are perfectly efficient 11 By contrast the insight of transaction costs theories of the MNEs simultaneously and independently developed in the 1970s by McManus 1972 Buckley and Casson 1976 Brown 1976 and Hennart 1977 1982 is that market imperfections are inherent attributes of markets and MNEs are institutions to bypass these imperfections 11 Markets experience natural imperfections i e imperfections that are because the implicit neoclassical assumptions of perfect knowledge and perfect enforcement are not realized 13 New Trade Theory edit Main article New Trade Theory New Trade Theory NTT is the economic critique of international free trade from the perspective of increasing returns to scale and the network effect Some economists have asked whether it might be effective for a nation to shelter infant industries until they had grown to a sufficient size large enough to compete internationally New Trade theorists challenge the assumption of diminishing returns to scale and some argue that using protectionist measures to build up a huge industrial base in certain industries will then allow those sectors to dominate the world market via a network effect Specific factors model edit Main article International trade Specific factors model In this model labour mobility between industries is possible while capital is immobile between industries in the short run Thus this model can be interpreted as a short run version of the Heckscher Ohlin model Traditional approaches edit nbsp The Porter diamond 14 Diamond model Michael Porter edit Main article Diamond model The diamond model is an economical model developed by Michael Porter in his book The Competitive Advantage of Nations where he published his theory of why particular industries become competitive in particular locations 15 The diamond model consists of six factors 15 Factor conditions Demand conditions Related and supporting industries Firm strategy structure and rivalry Government ChanceThe Porter thesis is that these factors interact with each other to create conditions where innovation and improved competitiveness occurs 15 Diffusion of innovations Rogers 1962 edit Main article Diffusion of innovations Diffusion of innovation is a theory of how why and at what rate new ideas and technology spread through cultures Everett Rogers introduced it in his 1962 book Diffusion of Innovations writing that Diffusion is the process by which an innovation is communicated through certain channels over time among the members of a social system 16 Eclectic paradigm John H Dunning edit Main article Eclectic paradigm The eclectic paradigm is a theory in economics and is also known as the OLI Model 17 18 It is a further development of the theory of internalization and published by John H Dunning in 1993 19 The theory of internalization itself is based on the transaction cost theory 19 This theory says that transactions are made within an institution if the transaction costs on the free market are higher than the internal costs This process is called internalization 19 For Dunning not only the structure of organization is important 19 He added three additional factors to the theory 19 Ownership advantages 17 trademark production technique entrepreneurial skills returns to scale 18 Locational advantages existence of raw materials low wages special taxes or tariffs 18 Internalisation advantages advantages by producing through a partnership arrangement such as licensing or a joint venture 18 Foreign direct investment theory edit Main article Foreign direct investment Foreign direct investment FDI in its classic form is defined as a company from one country making a physical investment into building a factory in another country It is the establishment of an enterprise by a foreigner 20 Its definition can be extended to include investments made to acquire lasting interest in enterprises operating outside of the economy of the investor 21 The FDI relationship consists of a parent enterprise and a foreign affiliate which together form a multinational corporation MNC In order to qualify as FDI the investment must afford the parent enterprise control over its foreign affiliate The International Monetary Fund IMF defines control in this case as owning 10 or more of the ordinary shares or voting power of an incorporated firm or its equivalent for an unincorporated firm lower ownership shares are known as portfolio investment 22 Monopolistic advantage theory Stephen Hymer edit Main article Monopolistic advantage theory The monopolistic advantage theory is an approach in international business which explains why firms can compete in foreign settings against indigenous competitors 23 and is frequently associated with the seminal contribution of Stephen Hymer 24 Prior to Stephen Hymer s doctoral thesis The International Operations of National Firms A Study of foreign direct Investment theories did not adequately explain why firms engaged in foreign operations Hymer started his research by analyzing the motivations behind foreign investment of US corporations in other countries Neoclassical theories dominant at the time explained foreign direct investments as capital movements across borders based on perceived benefits from interest rates in other markets there was no need to separate them from any other kind of investment Ietto Guilles 2012 He effectively differentiated Foreign Direct Investment and portfolio investments by including the notion of control of foreign firms to FDI Theory which implies control of the operation whilst portfolio foreign investment confers a share of ownership but not control Stephen Hymer focused on and considered FDI and MNE as part of the theory of the firm Hymer 1976 21 He also dismissed the assumption that FDIs are motivated by the search of low costs in foreign countries by emphasizing the fact that local firms are not able to compete effectively against foreign firms even though they have to face foreign barriers cultural political lingual etc to market entry He suggested that firms invest in foreign countries in order to maximize their specific firm advantages in imperfect markets that is markets where the flow of information is uneven and allows companies to benefit from a competitive advantage over the local competition Stephen Hymer also suggested a second determinant for firms engaging in foreign operations removal of conflicts When a rival company is operating in a foreign market or is willing to enter one a conflict situation arises Through FDI a multinational can share or take complete control of foreign production effectively removing conflict This will lead to the increase of market power for the specific firm increasing imperfections in the market as a whole Ietto Guilles 2012 A final determinant for multinationals making direct investments is the distribution of risk through diversification By choosing different markets and production locations the risk inherent to foreign operations are spread and reduced All of these motivations for FDI are built on market imperfections and conflict A firm engaging in direct investment could then reduce competition eliminate the conflicts and exploit the firm specific advantages making them capable of succeeding in a foreign market Stephen Hymer can be considered the father of international business because he effectively studied multinationals from a different perspective than the existing literature by approaching multinationals as national companies with international operations regarded as expansions from home operations He analyzed the activities of the MNEs and their impact on the economy gave an explanation for the large flow of foreign investments by US corporations at a time where they were incomplete and envisioned the ethical conflicts that could arise from the increase in power of MNEs Non availability approach Irving B Kravis 1956 edit Main article Non availability approach The non availability explains international trade by the fact that each country imports the goods that are not available at home 25 This unavailability may be due to lack of natural resources oil gold etc this is absolute unavailability or to the fact that the goods cannot be produced domestically or could only be produced at prohibitive costs for technological or other reasons this is relative unavailability 26 On the other hand each country exports the goods that are available at home 26 Technology gap theory of trade Michael Posner edit Main article Technology gap The technology gap theory describes an advantage enjoyed by the country that introduces new goods in a market As a consequence of research activity and entrepreneurship new goods are produced and the innovating country enjoys a monopoly until the other countries learn to produce these goods in the meantime they have to import them Thus international trade is created for the time necessary to imitate the new goods imitation lag 25 Uppsala model edit Main article Uppsala model The Uppsala model 27 is a theory that explains how firms gradually intensify their activities in foreign markets 28 It is similar to the POM model 29 The key features of both models are the following firms first gain experience from the domestic market before they move to foreign markets firms start their foreign operations from culturally and or geographically close countries and move gradually to culturally and geographically more distant countries firms start their foreign operations by using traditional exports and gradually move to using more intensive and demanding operation modes sales subsidiaries etc both at the company and target country level 30 Updated Uppsala model edit Main article Uppsala model The Updated Uppsala model 31 is a further progression of the original Uppsala model Like the Uppsala model the Updated Uppsala model is a theory that explains firm internationalization as a process of gradual commitment However instead of an increased commitment to other markets the theory posits that firms commit to business networks 32 Firms thereby utilize the established relationships with other firms to internationalize within their network e g by localizing production at a foreign production site of the client 33 Learning portal model edit The Learning Portal Model 34 is a new theory that was originally developed to explain the emergence and catch up of multinational firms from the emerging markets The theory explains that latecomer firms from both advanced and emerging markets can use springboarding strategies to leapfrog certain technological development stages and accelerate their catch up with incumbent leading firms in their industry To do so the catching up firms establish learning portals in knowledge hubs to acquire knowledge and assets which they exploit to compete in global markets Further theories editContingency theory edit Main article Contingency theory Contingency theory refers to any of a number of management theories Several contingency approaches were developed concurrently in the late 1960s They suggested that previous theories such as Weber s bureaucracy and Frederick Winslow Taylor s scientific management had failed because they neglected that management style and organizational structure were influenced by various aspects of the environment the contingency factors There could not be one best way for leadership or organization Contract theory edit Main article Contract theory In economics contract theory studies how economic actors can and do construct contractual arrangements generally in the presence of asymmetric information Contract theory is closely connected to the field of law and economics One prominent field of application is managerial compensation Economy of scale edit Main article Economy of scale Economies of scale in microeconomics are the cost advantages that a business obtains due to expansion They are factors that cause a producer s average cost per unit to fall as output rises 35 Diseconomies of scale are the opposite Economies of scale may be utilized by any size firm expanding its scale of operation Internalisation theory Peter J Buckley amp Mark Casson 1976 Rugman 1981 edit Main article Internalization theory Product life cycle theory edit Main article Product life cycle theory As first articulated by Raymond Vernon in 1966 a product goes through a life cycle consisting of four stages new product growth product maturity product and obsolescence product The conditions in which a product is sold change over time and must be managed as it moves through this succession of stages This is called product life cycle management 36 Transaction cost theory edit Main articles Theory of the firm and Transaction cost The theory of the firm consists of a number of economic theories which describe the nature of the firm company or corporation including its existence its behaviour and its relationship with the market Ronald Coase set out his transaction cost theory of the firm in 1937 making it one of the first neo classical attempts to define the firm theoretically in relation to the market 37 Coase sets out to define a firm in a manner which is both realistic and compatible with the idea of substitution at the margin so instruments of conventional economic analysis apply He notes that a firm s interactions with the market may not be under its control for instance because of sales taxes but its internal allocation of resources are Within a firm market transactions are eliminated and in place of the complicated market structure with exchange transactions is substituted the entrepreneur who directs production He asks why alternative methods of production such as the price mechanism and economic planning could not either achieve all production so that either firms use internal prices for all their production or one big firm runs the entire economy Theory of the growth of the firm Edith Penrose 1959 edit Main article Edith Penrose The Theory of the Growth of the Firm While at Johns Hopkins Penrose participated in a research project on the growth of firms She came to the conclusion that the existing theory of the firm was inadequate to explain how firms grow Her insight was to realise that the Firm in theory is not the same thing as flesh and blood organizations that businessmen call firms This insight eventually led to the publication of her second book The Theory of the Growth of the Firm in 1959 See also editDivision of labour Globalization International marketing International trade Internationalization and localization List of economic communities List of free trade agreements Mercantilism Cultural homogenizationReferences edit Susman Gerald I 2007 Small and Medium sized Enterprises and the Global Economy Young et al 2003 Edward Elgar Publishing p 281 ISBN 978 1 84542 595 1 Adel H M Zeinhom G A Mahrous A A 2018 Effective management of an internationalization strategy A case study on Egyptian British universities partnerships International Journal of Technology Management amp Sustainable Development 17 2 183 202 doi 10 1386 tmsd 17 2 183 1 S2CID 159384176 a b c Ingham Barbara 2004 International economics a European focus Pearson Education p 336 ISBN 0 273 65507 8 a b c d Hunt E K 2002 History of economic thought A critical perspective M E Sharpe p 120 ISBN 0 7656 0607 0 Blaug Mark 1992 The methodology of economics or How economists explain Cambridge University Press p 190 ISBN 0 521 43678 8 Krugman Paul Wells Robin Economics Worth Publishers New York 2006 Bator Francis M August 1958 The Anatomy of Market Failure The Quarterly Journal of Economics 72 3 The MIT Press 351 379 doi 10 2307 1882231 JSTOR 1882231 Medema Steven G July 2004 Mill Sidgwick and the Evolution of the Theory of Market Failure PDF Retrieved 2007 06 23 a b c d e DeGennaro Ramon P December 2005 Market Imperfections PDF Working Paper Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Working Paper Series Archived from the original PDF on 2010 04 01 Retrieved 2009 03 17 Pitelis Christos Roger Sugden 2000 The nature of the transnational firm Hymer 1960 published in 1976 Kindleberger 1969 amp Caves 1971 Routledge p 74 ISBN 0 415 16787 6 a b c Pitelis Christos Roger Sugden 2000 The nature of the transnational firm Routledge p 224 ISBN 0 415 16787 6 Pitelis Christos Roger Sugden 2000 The nature of the transnational firm Bain 1956 Routledge p 74 ISBN 0 415 16787 6 Pitelis Christos Roger Sugden 2000 The nature of the transnational firm Dunning amp Rugman 1985 Teece 1981 Routledge p 74 ISBN 0 415 16787 6 Traill Bruce Eamonn Pitts 1998 Competitiveness in the Food Industry Porter 1990 p 127 Springer p 19 ISBN 0 7514 0431 4 a b c Traill Bruce Eamonn Pitts 1998 Competitiveness in the Food Industry Springer p 301 ISBN 0 7514 0431 4 Rogers Everett M 2003 Diffusion of Innovations 5th ed New York NY Free Press a b Hagen Antje 1997 Deutsche Direktinvestitionen in Grossbritannien 1871 1918 Dissertation in German Jena Franz Steiner Verlag p 32 ISBN 3 515 07152 0 a b c d Twomey Michael J 2000 A Century of Foreign Investment in the Third World Book Routledge p 8 ISBN 0 415 23360 7 a b c d e Falkenhahn Alexander Roman Stanslowski 2001 11 27 Das Eklektische Paradigma des John Dunning PDF Seminar paper in German Retrieved 2009 02 19 permanent dead link O Sullivan Arthur Sheffrin Steven M 2003 Economics Principles in Action Upper Saddle River New Jersey 07458 Pearson Prentice Hall p 551 ISBN 0 13 063085 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Foreign Direct Investment United Nations Conference on Trade and Development www unctad org International Monetary Fund 1993 Balance of Payments Manual fifth edition Washington D C Burgel Oliver 2000 The internationalisation of British start up companies in high technology industries Springer Zentrum fur Europaische Wirtschaftsforschung p 48 ISBN 3 7908 1292 7 Burgel Oliver 2000 The internationalisation of British start up companies in high technology industries Hymer 1976 Hymer s original thesis was completed in 1960 but it was only after his death in 1976 that it was published by the MIT By that time his ideas had already found widespread acceptance Springer Zentrum fur Europaische Wirtschaftsforschung p 48 ISBN 3 7908 1292 7 a b Gandolfo Giancarlo 1998 International Trade Theory and Policy With 12 Tables Irving B Kravis 1956 Springer pp 233 234 ISBN 3 540 64316 8 a b Gandolfo Giancarlo 1998 International Trade Theory and Policy With 12 Tables Springer p 544 ISBN 3 540 64316 8 Elgar Edward 2003 Learning in the Internationalisation Process of Firms Johanson amp Wiedersheim Paul 1975 Johanson amp Vahlne 1977 p 261 ISBN 1 84064 662 4 Retrieved 2009 03 21 Blomstermo Anders Dharma Deo Sharma 2003 Learning in the internationalisation process of firms Edward Elgar pp 36 53 ISBN 978 1 84064 662 7 Elgar Edward 2003 Learning in the Internationalisation Process of Firms Luostarinen 1979 p 261 ISBN 1 84064 662 4 Retrieved 2009 03 21 Elgar Edward 2003 Learning in the Internationalisation Process of Firms p 261 ISBN 1 84064 662 4 Retrieved 2009 03 21 Johanson J Vahlne J E 2009 The Uppsala internationalization process model revisited From liability of foreignness to liability of outsidership Journal of International Business Studies 40 9 1411 1431 doi 10 1057 jibs 2009 24 S2CID 17711333 Retrieved April 29 2021 Johanson J Vahlne J E 2013 The Uppsala model on evolution of the multinational business enterprise From internalization to coordination of networks International Marketing Review 30 3 189 210 doi 10 1108 02651331311321963 Retrieved April 29 2021 Hertenstein P Sutherland D Anderson J 2017 Internationalization within networks Exploring the relationship between inward and outward FDI in China s auto components industry Asia Pacific Journal of Management 34 69 96 doi 10 1007 s10490 015 9422 3 S2CID 55924013 Retrieved April 29 2021 Hertenstein P Alon I 2021 A learning portal model of emerging markets multinationals Global Strategy Journal 12 134 162 doi 10 1002 gsj 1400 O Sullivan Arthur Sheffrin Steven M 2003 Economics Principles in Action Upper Saddle River New Jersey 07458 Pearson Prentice Hall p 157 ISBN 0 13 063085 3 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Vernon Raymond 1966 International Investment and International Trade in the Product Cycle in Quarterly Journal of Economics Quarterly Journal of Economics Cambridge 191 ISSN 0033 5533 permanent dead link Coase Ronald H The Nature of the Firm Economica 4 pp 386 405 1937 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Internationalization amp oldid 1187090755, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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