International Business: Competing in the Global MarketplaceBy focusing on managerial implications, this text offers an in-depth look at international business. It covers: how and why countries differ; the functions of the global monetary system; the economics and politics of international trade and investment; and the strategies of international business. |
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Contents
INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW | 2 |
COUNTRY FACTORS | 34 |
Introduction | 77 |
Copyright | |
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International Business: Competing in the Global Marketplace Charles W. L. Hill No preview available - 2000 |
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agreement Airbus American argued Asian assets benefits billion Boeing borrow Britain Chapter China cocoa companies consumers costs countries country's culture currency debt deficit deutsche mark Deutsche Telekom dollar domestic Economist eurocurrency Europe European example exchange rate regime exports factors firm's firms fixed exchange rate floating exchange rate foreign direct investment foreign exchange market foreign investment free trade funds GATT global capital market Heckscher-Ohlin theory implications important increase industry inflation rate integration interest rates international business international trade investors Islamic Japan Japanese joint venture know-how licensing loans major manufacturing McDonald's ment Mexican Mexico monetary multinational NAFTA Ogoni operations percent political production profit result risk selling semiconductor South Korea strategy structure subsidiary subsidies suppliers tariffs theory tion trade and investment trade barriers trade policy United vertical FDI World Trade World Trade Organization