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Master of Business
Administration- MBA Semester 3
IB0012–Management of
Multinational Corporations -4 Credits
(Book ID: B1200)
Assignment (60 marks)
Note: Assignment Set -1 must be written within 6-8 pages. Answer all
questions.
Q1. Discuss the meaning of international business. What are the
difficulties in it?
Answer. International business is a term used rarely to describe
all commercial transactions (private and governmental, sales, investments,
logistics, and transportation) that take place between two or more regions,
countries and nations beyond their political boundary. Usually, private
companies undertake such transactions for profit; governments undertake them
for profit and for political reasons. It refers to all those business
activities which involve cross border transactions of goods, services,
resources between two or more nations. Transaction of economic resources
include capital, skills, people etc. for international production of physical
goods and services such as finance, banking, insurance, construction etc.
Q2. Describe the potential sources of disputes between MNC and host
country governments.
Answer. Although the Multinational Corporations (MNCs) has no power
over the host government, if may have considerable power under that government.
By being able to influence certain factors, the MNC has the opportunity to help
or harm national economics; in this sense, it may be said to have power against
host governments. The strategic aspects of a host country’s national policy
that are subject to the influence of the MNC include:
1. Planning and Direction of Industrial Growth
Host nations have viewed with
concern the tendencies of many MNCs to centralize strategic decisions in their
headquarters. For the host governments this signifies loss of control over
industrial strategy to the foreign-based MNC. The MNCs allegiances are geocentric;
their overall objectives are growth and profits globally rather than in the
host economy.
Q3. Compare the salient features of Chinese and Indian Management
Practices.
Answer. It looks like we are moving toward a significant new quantification
of management practice. When academics start tackling these issues, it tends to
get taken beyond what is sufficient for consulting firms’ practice. The tool
used in the studies for evaluating management practices combines 18 dimensions
of management practice grouped into four areas: operations, monitoring, targets
and incentives. As one might expect, the soft skills like communication,
leadership and inspiration are missing, as they are harder to objectively
assess.
Q4. Discuss the four variables of Porter’s theory.
Answer. Michael Porter's famous Five Forces of Competitive Position
model provides a simple perspective for assessing and analysing the competitive
strength and position of a corporation or business organization. After his earlier
work on corporate strategy Porter extended the application of his ideas and
theories to international economies and the competitive positioning of nations,
as featured in his later books. In fact in 1985 Porter was appointed to
President Ronald Reagan's Commission on Industrial Competitiveness, which
marked the widening of his perspective to national economies.
Q5. Explain the merits and demerits of Matrix and product division
structures.
Answer. Organisational structure refers to the way that tasks and
responsibilities are allocated to individuals and the ways that individuals are
grouped together into offices, departments, and divisions.
Mangers often describe their
organisation by drawing an organisation chart which shows the structure of an
organisation and the relationships and relative ranks of its profits and
positions.
When small businesses are
started, they consist of an owner, manager and a few employees so an
organisational structure is unnecessary at this stage. As an organisation grows
to become an established business, it will adopt one of a number of
organisational structures to implement its strategy. There are a number of different structures
(the allocation of tasks and responsibilities to individuals) an organisation
can choose. They include a functional
structure, multidivisional structure or a matrix structure.
Q6. Write short notes on
(a) make-or-buy decisions
Answer. The act of choosing between manufacturing a product
in-house or purchasing it from an external supplier. In a make-or-buy decision,
the two most important factors to consider are cost and availability of
production capacity.
An enterprise may decide to
purchase the product rather than producing it, if is cheaper to buy than make
or if it does not have sufficient production capacity to produce it in-house.
With the
(b) Just-in-time methods.
Answer. The "just-in-time method" is an inventory
strategy where materials are only ordered and received as they are needed in
the production process. The goal of this method is to reduce costs by saving
money on overhead inventory expenses. The company must be able to accurately
forecast demand for goods and services for the just-in-time method to be
effective.
Method
The just-in-time inventory method
is considered a "pull" approach in manufacturing. When sales
activities warrant more production, inventory is "pulled" and more
manufacturing supplies are
receipt of inventory materials,
labour strikes or supply shortages -- before deciding if this inventory method
is right for their organization.
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