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UNDERSTANDING GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT WTO AND SAARC

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Principles of Management ­ MGT503
VU
Lesson 5.14
UNDERSTANDING GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT
WTO AND SAARC
UNDERSTANDING THE GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT
Several significant forces are reshaping the global environment that managers face. Two important features
of the global environment are regional trading alliances and the World Trade Organization.
A.
Regional Trading Alliances.
Regional trading alliances are reshaping global competition. It's no longer country versus country,
but region against region.
1.
The European Union (EU) is a union of 15 (25 state members are according to December, 2004)
European nations created to eliminate national barriers to travel employment, investment, and
trade.
a.
The primary motivation for the creation of the EU (in February 1992) was to allow these nations to
reassert their position against the industrial strength of the United States and Japan.
b.
The EU took an enormous step towards full unification in 1999 when 11 of the 15 countries
became part of the EMU--the economic and monetary union, the formal name for the system
where participating countries share the same currency, the euro.
c.
Six other countries (Turkey, Romania, Slovakia, Bulgaria, Latvia, Lithuania, and Malta) are
considering starting membership negotiations.
2.
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is an agreement among the Mexican,
Canadian, and U.S. governments in which all barriers to free trade will eventually be eliminated.
a.
NAFTA went into effect on January 1, 1994.
b.
The signing of NAFTA had both critics and champions.
c.
Eliminating the barriers to free trade (tariffs, import licensing requirements, customs user fees) has
resulted in a strengthening of the economic power of all three countries.
d.
Colombia, Mexico, and Venezuela signed an economic pact eliminating import duties and tariffs in
1994.
e.
An additional 36 countries in the Caribbean region, South America, and Central America are
negotiating a Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) trade agreement.
f.
Also in existence is another free-trade block known as the Southern Cone Common Market--
Mercosur.
3.
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is a trading alliance of 10 Asian nations.
a.
In the future, the Asian region promises to be one of the fastest-growing economic regions of the
world.
b.
Another significant historical and economic event in this region was the return of Hong Kong from
British rule to Chinese rule on July 1, 1997.
4.
The South Asian Alliance for Regional Cooperation body i.e. SAARC
B
World Trade Organization (WTO) is an international body of which more than 100 countries are
members. Several trade treaties have been agreed and worked out so far for regulation of world
trade. It is a body which helps in promoting global, regional and trade with most favored nation
states.
Test your answers!
How does a global economy create both opportunities and challenges for managers?
1.
The global economy creates opportunities because, with the entire world as a marketplace and
national borders becoming irrelevant, the potential for organizations to grow and expand increases
dramatically. It can create challenges in that new competitors can suddenly appear anytime,
anywhere, and managers who don't respond quickly to changes are likely to find their
organizations' survival in doubt.
2.
Describe the four major regional trading alliances including what it is, why it was formed,
and what challenges it is facing.
The European Union (EU) united Belgium, Denmark, France, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg,
the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain, the United Kingdom, Germany, Austria, Finland, and Sweden in
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Principles of Management ­ MGT503
VU
a single market with no national barriers to travel, employment, investment, and trade. The EU was
formed to allow its 15 member nations to reassert their position against the industrial strength of
the United States and Japan. Its ultimate goal, to have common customs duties and unified
industrial and commercial policies, as well as a single currency and regional central bank, faces
problems particularly over the establishment of a single currency.
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) united Mexico, Canada, and the United
States in dropping all barriers to free trade such as tariffs, import licensing requirements, and
customs user fees. It was formed to provide such long-term benefits as job creation, market
development, and an increased standard of living for all three countries. Studies have reported both
positive and negative effects on employment to date. It faces continued opposition from labor
advocates and environmentalists and competition from other regional trade alliances and trading
blocs.
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) includes Brunei, Indonesia, Malaysia, the
Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Burma, Cambodia, and Laos in a trading entity. Another
significant development in Asia was the return of Hong Kong from British Rule to Chinese rule in July
1997.
South Asian Alliance for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) is a body comprising of Pakistan, India,
Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Nepal. It is a trading as well as collaborative entity for dialogue on
concerns of mutual interest.
What are the legal-political and economic factors that managers need to be aware of in
3.
managing globally?
The legal-political environment consists of legal-political systems and legal-political procedures.
Managers must understand the legal-political environment in a foreign country in order to un-
derstand the constraints under which they operate and the opportunities that exist.
The primary economic factors that managers must be aware of in global management are
fluctuating currency exchange rates, inflation rates, and diverse tax policies.
Compare and contrast national culture and organizational culture.
4.
Like organizational culture, national culture is shared by all or most inhabitants of a country and
shapes their behavior and the way they see the world. Organizational and national cultures differ in
that national culture has a greater effect on employees than does organizational culture.
Describe Hofstede's four characteristics of national culture.
5.
Geert Hofstede found that national cultures differed on four dimensions: (a) individualism vs.
collectivism, which describes who it's believed is responsible for caring for people--the individual
or the group; (b) power distance, or the extent to which a society accepts the fact that power is
distributed unequally; (c) uncertainty avoidance, or the degree to which people are tolerant of
behavior and opinions that differ from their own; and (d) quantity of life (assertiveness and the
acquisition of money and material goods) vs. quality of life (importance of relationships and
concern for the welfare of others).
How can an understanding of Hofstede's four dimensions help managers be more effective
6.
in managing in a global marketplace?
Understanding these four dimensions helps managers be more effective in managing in the global
marketplace by identifying those countries that are most like and least like the United States, where
U.S. managers would be likely to fit best, and where they would have the biggest adjustment
problems.
Let us now learn the first management function in POLCA i.e. Planning.
Planning; Why and what ?
Planning is one of the four functions of management.
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Principles of Management ­ MGT503
VU
WHY DO MANAGERS PLAN?
Purposes of Planning.
Planning is important and serves many significant purposes.
1.
Planning gives direction to the organization.
2.
Planning reduces the impact of change.
3.
Planning establishes a coordinated effort.
4.
Planning reduces uncertainty.
5.
Planning reduces overlapping and wasteful activities.
6.
Planning establishes objectives or standards that are used in controlling.
WHAT IS PLANNING?
Planning involves defining the organization's goals, establishing an overall strategy for achieving
these goals, and developing a comprehensive set of plans to integrate and coordinate organizational
work.
Planning is in fact the advance decision making by managers. Keeping in mind that decision making
and decision taking, may it be for present or for future is always required and is very much a
managerial job. Let us first study the nature process of decision making and its various models and
types.
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Table of Contents:
  1. HISTORICAL OVERVIEW OF MANAGEMENT:The Egyptian Pyramid, Great China Wall
  2. MANAGEMENT AND MANAGERS:Why Study Management?
  3. MANAGERIAL ROLES IN ORGANIZATIONS:Informational roles, Decisional roles
  4. MANAGERIAL FUNCTIONS I.E. POLCA:Management Process, Mistakes Managers Make
  5. MANAGERIAL LEVELS AND SKILLS:Middle-level managers, Top managers
  6. MANAGEMENT IDEAS: YESTERDAY AND TODAY, Anthropology, Economics
  7. CLASSICAL VIEW OF MANAGEMENT:Scientific management
  8. ADMINISTRATIVE VIEW OF MANAGEMENT:Division of work, Authority
  9. BEHAVIORAL THEORIES OF MANAGEMENT:The Hawthorne Studies
  10. QUANTITATIVE, CONTEMPORARY AND EMERGING VIEWS OF MANAGEMENT
  11. SYSTEM’S VIEW OF MANAGEMENT AND ORGANIZATION:Managing Systems
  12. ANALYZING ORGANIZATIONAL ENVIRONMENT AND UNDERSTANDING ORGANIZATIONAL CULTURE
  13. 21ST CENTURY MANAGEMENT TRENDS:Organizational social Responsibility
  14. UNDERSTANDING GLOBAL ENVIRONMENT WTO AND SAARC
  15. DECISION MAKING AND DECISION TAKING
  16. RATIONAL DECISION MAKING:Models of Decision Making
  17. NATURE AND TYPES OF MANAGERIAL DECISIONS:Decision-Making Styles
  18. NON RATIONAL DECISION MAKING:Group Decision making
  19. GROUP DECISION MAKING AND CREATIVITY:Delphi Method, Scenario Analysis
  20. PLANNING AND DECISION AIDS-I:Methods of Forecasting, Benchmarking
  21. PLANNING AND DECISION AIDS-II:Budgeting, Scheduling, Project Management
  22. PLANNING: FUNCTIONS & BENEFITS:HOW DO MANAGERS PLAN?
  23. PLANNING PROCESS AND GOAL LEVELS:Types of Plans
  24. MANAGEMENT BY OBJECTIVE (MBO):Developing Plans
  25. STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT -1:THE IMPORTANCE OF STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT
  26. STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT - 2:THE STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT PROCESS
  27. LEVELS OF STRATEGIES, PORTER’S MODEL AND STRATEGY DEVELOPMENT (BCG) AND IMPLEMENTATION
  28. ENTREPRENEURSHIP MANAGEMENT:Why Is Entrepreneurship Important?
  29. ORGANIZING
  30. JOB DESIGN/SPECIALIZATION AND DEPARTMENTALIZATION
  31. SPAN OF COMMAND, CENTRALIZATION VS DE-CENTRALIZATION AND LINE VS STAFF AUTHORITY
  32. ORGANIZATIONAL DESIGN AND ORGANIC VS MECHANISTIC VS VIRTUAL STRUCTURES
  33. LEADING AND LEADERSHIP MOTIVATING SELF AND OTHERS
  34. MASLOW’S NEEDS THEORY AND ITS ANALYSIS
  35. OTHER NEED AND COGNITIVE THEORIES OF MOTIVATION
  36. EXPECTANCY, GOAL SETTING AND RE-ENFORCEMENT THEORIES
  37. MOTIVATING KNOWLEDGE PROFESSIONALS LEADERSHIP TRAIT THEORIES
  38. BEHAVIORAL AND SITUATIONAL MODELS OF LEADERSHIP
  39. STRATEGIC LEADERSHIP MODELS
  40. UNDERSTANDING GROUP DYNAMICS IN ORGANIZATIONS
  41. GROUP CONCEPTS, STAGES OF GROUP DEVELOPMENT AND TEAM EFFECTIVENESS
  42. UNDERSTANDING MANAGERIAL COMMUNICATION
  43. COMMUNICATION NETWORKS AND CHANNELS EFFECT OF ICT ON MANAGERIAL COMMUNICATION
  44. CONTROLLING AS A MANAGEMENT FUNCTION:The control process
  45. CONTROLLING ORGANIZATIONAL PERFORMANCE THROUGH PRODUCTIVITY AND QUALITY