1 / 20

Business Environment

Business Environment. Lecture 20 ( L7/S2) Multinational Corporations Milena Malinowska. Definitions. MNC account for half of global GDP The majority of MNC assets are in foreign countries 20% of top MNC come from developing countries

bao
Download Presentation

Business Environment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Business Environment Lecture 20 (L7/S2) Multinational Corporations MilenaMalinowska

  2. Definitions • MNC account for half of global GDP • The majority of MNC assets are in foreign countries • 20% of top MNC come from developing countries • Expanding on the international market is based on cost reduction and risk diversification • Barriers to MNCs are local language, culture and host government attitude • Host countries benefit greatly from MNC activities

  3. What is a MNC ? • A company that owns a subsidiary (affiliate) in more than one foreign country • MNC’s size is measured in terms of revenue/profit • MNCs locate their production facilities according to factor (resource) endowment • The ownership of resources abroad constitutes FDI • In 2008 only, 77 000 MNCs controlled 780 000 subsidiary companies. Big MNCs have affiliates in more than 40 countries • These enterprises employed 82 million people, made FDI worth $ 16 trillion and generated sales of $ 30 trillion = ½ world GDP (Source: Sloman&Jones, 2011)

  4. Super MNCs • A Swiss study from 2007 found out that 1318 MNCs control 60% of the world revenues • Less than 1% (147) are in charge of 40% of world revenue • Top 20 of these companies is dominated by investment banks • Such an overdependence explains the deepness of the 2008 crisis (Source: PLoS One, The Network of Global Corporate Control, 2011) • 44 out of 100 biggest economies are companies (2009) • These 44 MNC generated revenues of $ 6.4 trillion (Source: The Influence of the World’s Largest 100 Economic Entities, 2009)

  5. Top 20 MNC (2011) Rank Company Revenue Profits ($ millions) ($ millions) • 1 Wal-Mart Stores 421,849 16,389 • 2 Royal Dutch Shell 378,152 20,127 • 3 Exxon Mobil 354,674 30,460 • 4 BP 308,928 -3,719 • 5 Sinopec Group 273,422 7,629 • 6 China National Petroleum 240,192 14,367 • 7 State Grid 226,294 4,556 • 8 Toyota Motor 221,760 4,766 • 9 Japan Post Holdings 203,958 4,891 • 10 Chevron 196,337 19,024 • 11 Total 186,055 14,001 • 12 ConocoPhillips 184,966 11,358 • 13 Volkswagen 168,041 9,053 • 14 AXA 162,236 3,641 • 15 Fannie Mae 153,825 -14,014 • 16 General Electric 151,628 11,644 • 17 ING Group 147,052 3,678 • 18 Glencore International 144,978 1,291 • 19 Berkshire Hathaway 136,185 12,967 • 20 General Motors 135,592 6,17 (Source: Fortune Global 500)

  6. MNC by home country (Source: Fortune Global 500)

  7. Global FDI ($ billion) (Source: UNCTAD – World Investment Report 2010)

  8. FDI inflows (Source: UNCTAD – World Investment Report 2010 & Development and Globalization Report 2004)

  9. FDI inflows ($ billion) (Source: UNCTAD – World Investment Report 2010)

  10. FDI inflows and outflows 2009 (Source: UNCTAD – World Investment Report 2010)

  11. Cross border M&A • The 1990s saw intensive M&A activity among companies from developed countries • During the 2000s M&A targeted companies in East-European states, South-East Asia and Latin America (Source: UNCTAD – World Investment Report 2000 & 2010)

  12. FDI inflows in BG (€ million) (Source: BNB)

  13. Reasons to become a MNC • Cost reduction: • different business activities are located according to factor endowment – cost and quality of inputs; managerial talent • Risk spreading: • escaping saturated home market • falling revenues in one country can be off set by rising revenues in another • Access to new markets: • gaining from competitive advantage in developing markets • attaining knowledge from the international scene

  14. Multinational expansion • Horizontal integration – produce the same product in different markets, with minimum/some product tailoring • Vertical integration – different stages of production are undertaken in different countries • Conglomerate – produce different products in different countries

  15. Degree of internationalization • License – sell a license to a foreign company to produce and sell the product abroad, obtain a fee • Export – use a foreign distributor, or set up own distribution center abroad • Set up own packaging unit to finish the products abroad • FDI – set up whole production division • M&A – acquire a whole foreign company Investment/Risk M&A FDI Local packaging Export (subsidiary) Export (distributor) License Time

  16. Internationalization of PLC • In the Growth phase, substitutes will emerge, to lower costs, the firm might shift production where inputs are cheap + exports • At the Maturity stage, the market is almost saturated, whole production units will be set in new, developing markets + exports • At the Decline stage subsidiaries of the firm import the product in the original market. Strategies during PLC: • In the Intro phase, the new product generates increasing revenue and profit, exporting is a good strategy

  17. Barriers for MNCs • Language – in some markets English is barely spoken: • Africa, Latin America • Marketing – host culture needs to absorb the product: • Carrefour &Tesco in China • Host governments – extensive regulation for MNC • Dubai • Communication & coordination – too big MNC deal with internal bureaucracy

  18. Advantages for host country • Employment – MNC’s subsidiaries create many new jobs • Balancing the BoP – inflows of money to the economy, import substitution and export promotion • Technological spillover – transfer of knowledge, practice, better production practices • Taxation revenues – inflow of money to the economy

  19. Disadvantages for host country • Uncertainty – MNC might switch host countries easily • Tax evasion – ‘transfer’ pricing • Power – MNC may exert power to avoid regulation in developing countries • Environmental damage – developing countries, rich in natural resources, but with weak institutional framework suffer from environmental damage

  20. Sources: • Lecture is based on: Business strategy in a global economy in Sloman, J. and Jones, E. (2011) Economics and the Business Environment (3rd ed) UK: Pearson • For further reading check: • http://american-business.org/581-multinational-corporation.html • UNCTAD – World Investment Report 2010 • КНСБ – МУЛТИНАЦИОНАЛНИТЕ КОМПАНИИ – 2008 (европейски аспекти на индустриалните отношения)

More Related