Accounting Problems of Multinational Businesses

Author(s):  
Elwood L Miller
Author(s):  
Susan Baxter

Economies of global scope afford businesses a competitive advantage. One way to utilize this advantage is to coordinate the leveraging of resources especially labor. Businesses have attempted to minimize labor costs and risks in an effort to maintain or increase competitive advantage. There is a risk to the global workforce: HIV/AIDS. This disease is striking at the heart of low cost labor pools. The impact on business is being felt now and will be felt for years to come. How large the impact is depends on the level of involvement of multinational businesses in the fight against HIV/AIDS. Multinational businesses must develop policies and procedures to combat this illness, as it is devastating labor pools in various parts of the world.


Author(s):  
Aytaç Gökmen

The amount of trade and international business volume in the world has amounted considerably as a result of the fast moving globalization and declining borders especially after the 1990s. International business and trade are important tools for countries and enterprises to increase their volumes of production and commerce as well as enhance employment, increase the national income and raise revenue for enterprises to make further investments. Turkey is located at the threshold of Europe and Asia, consolidating East and West, and North and South at the convergence of various trade routes. However, despite of being close to various countries, a great deal of Turkey's export potential is focused on the EU and developed countries. However, the production means in Turkey are not adequate, so it imports factors of production from abroad by way of international business operations. Thus, the aim of this study is to review the theory of globalization, international business, firm internationalization process of businesses, impact direction of multinational businesses as well as the commercial operations of the Turkish enterprises, real and commercial abilities of the Turkish firms and international business activities on the global basis; compare this to its entire trade volume and propose comments on these issues resting on credible national and international publications and figures.


The role of actor in networkization of the world markets, of the conductor in multinational integration of production processes, of the fragmentator in international trade and also that of the global marketologist – all these roles demand multinational businesses change radically their internal organization and their inside systems of management. This chapter describes the internal environment of multinational companies as an additional resource of their global competitiveness. Key features of the adaptive organizational structure of corporations are outlined. X-model of labor organization within a multinational corporate department is suggested; this model combines, on the one hand, the team interaction (for example, in the centers of innovations' generation or in the centers of strategic decision-making) and on the other – it guarantees the unity of a corporation (mainly through the structure of frame management), maintaining at the same time mobility and adaptability of this structure (for example, for the cases of strategic business zones' autonomism or when corporate chain of value creation is being reformatted. In the concluding paragraphs of this chapter we provide the overall evaluation of competitive environment (including consumer markets, relations with agents, suppliers and bodies of public regulation) which is also a factor of global positioning and global competitiveness for any multinational business.


2019 ◽  
Vol 58 (4) ◽  
pp. 687-704
Author(s):  
Qingjuan Wang ◽  
Rick D. Hackett ◽  
Yiming Zhang ◽  
Xun Cui

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to examine a varied set of personal characteristics (i.e. cultural values tied to Confucianism, Big Five personality attributes and test experience) for their combined ability to predict job applicants’ expected and experienced procedural fairness in the context of personnel selection. Design/methodology/approach A total of 324 applicants were surveyed as part of a process to select entry-level positions at a large IT manufacturing company in eastern China. Data were gathered in two waves, such that applicants’ personal characteristics and fairness expectations were obtained prior to their perceptions of procedural fairness, which were collected after the selection interview. Findings Confucian values, neuroticism, conscientiousness and test experience all predicted applicants’ procedural fairness expectations. Only test experience had both direct and indirect effects on procedural justice perceptions. All other effects involving personal characteristics and experience of procedural fairness were mediated by applicants’ fairness expectations. Research limitations/implications The demonstration of the impact of a varied set of personal characteristics on applicants’ perceptions of procedural fairness is consistent with theory-driven models intended to understand and predict these perceptions. The findings suggest, among other considerations, that multinational businesses cannot assume that a standardized approach to selection will be viewed in the same manner by applicants across national contexts. Originality/value The authors show, in an operational employee selection context, how a varied set of personal characteristics can usefully combine to predict applicants’ procedural fairness expectations, as well as their experience of procedural fairness.


AJIL Unbound ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 113 ◽  
pp. 152-156
Author(s):  
Joshua P. Zoffer

With the Trump administration's reimposition of financial sanctions on Iran, the power of the weaponized dollar is yet again making headlines—and putting distance between the United States and its allies. The dollar's special status as the world's key currency affords the United States an unrivaled sanctioning power. Because access to dollars is a near-necessity for multinational businesses and financial institutions, the United States can unilaterally impose costly sanctions by denying such access to a target—whether a state, company, or individual. This capability is one form of the “exorbitant privilege” afforded to the United States by the dollar's international role. This essay considers why the dollar's status affords the United States this sanctioning power and how the United States exercises it. I first summarize the nature of the dollar's role. Next, I explain the means by which the United States has weaponized that role, especially through financial sanctions. I conclude by offering some potential limitations on that power and exploring the ways in which other countries might seek to erode it.


Author(s):  
Paula De la Cruz-Fernandez

A multinational corporation is a multiple unit business enterprise, vertically managed, that operates in various countries, called host economies. Operations beyond national borders are controlled and managed from one location or headquarters, called the home economy. The units or business activities such as manufacturing, distribution, and marketing are, in the modern multinational as opposed to other forms of international business, all structured under a single organization. The location of the headquarters of the multinational corporation, where the business is registered, defines the “nationality” of the company. While United Kingdom held ownership of over half of the world’s foreign direct investment (FDI), defined not as acquisition but as a managed, controlled investment that an organization does beyond its national border, at the beginning of the 20th century, the United States grew to first place throughout the 20th century—in 2002, 22 percent of the world’s FDI came from the United States, which was also home to ten of the fifty largest corporations in the world. The US-based, large, modern corporation, operated by salaried managers with branches and operations in many nations, emerged in the mid-19th century and has since been a key player and driver in both economic and cultural globalization. The development of corporate capitalism in the United States is closely related with the growth of US-driven business abroad and has unique features that place the US multinational model apart from other business organizations operating internationally such as family multinational businesses which are more common in Europe and Latin America. The range and diversity of US-headquartered multinationals changed over time as well, and different countries and cultures made the nature of managing business overseas more complex. Asia came strong into the picture in the last third of the 20th century as regulations and deindustrialization grew in Europe. Global expansion also meant that societies around the world were connecting transnationally through new channels. Consumers and producers globally are also part of the history of multinational corporations—cultural values, socially constructed perceptions of gender and race, different understandings of work, and the everyday lives and experiences of peoples worldwide are integral to the operations and forms of multinationals.


Multinational business has become not only the stimulus for economic globalization, networkisation of business environment and its fragmentation (which has nothing to do with political and/or administrative borders) but also the only truly competitive globally type of entrepreneurial activity. Through multinational systems of production & distribution today privatization is being carried out, taking into account the key advantages of globalization (which, within the multinational economic space turn into the hyper-advantages of businesses). At the same time, other processes are taking place, namely: nationalization of globally predetermined problems (economic, social, environmental and political ones) and also autonomism via economic networking of business and public administration. In this chapter, we consider the contemporary contents and the resource of global competitive advantages of multinational businesses (hyper-presence, hyper-competitiveness, hyper-positioning, hyper-mobility, hyper-perspective and finally – hyper-income). We also analyze the network instruments used in the formation of “internal market of multinational corporations” which is protected from nearly all external impacts and which is also using the marketing and organizational potentials of business environment networkization at the multinational level.


Author(s):  
Purna Prabhakar Nandamuri ◽  
Mukesh Kumar Mishra ◽  
Gowthami Ch

Ethical relativism is the most prevalent philosophical sub discipline. Ethical relativism represents that there is no moral right or wrong, asserting that morals evolve and change with social norms over a period of time. As the businesses have been growing transnational, this has become a burden rather than advantage, leading to confusion about whether to follow the host country or the home country cultural standards. Adopting the host country cultural values might end up with contradictory and inconsistent practices in the same organization whereas strictly believing in the home country culture might lead to rigidity and chaos in respective markets, forfeiting the opportunities. Thus, overcoming the mindset of ethical relativism has become a big burden on multinational businesses. Eventually, there lies a great hope for ethical universalism rather than relativism in the context of cross-cultural and diverse businesses.


2016 ◽  
pp. 949-968
Author(s):  
Aytaç Gökmen

The amount of trade and international business volume in the world has amounted considerably as a result of the fast moving globalization and declining borders especially after the 1990s. International business and trade are important tools for countries and enterprises to increase their volumes of production and commerce as well as enhance employment, increase the national income and raise revenue for enterprises to make further investments. Turkey is located at the threshold of Europe and Asia, consolidating East and West, and North and South at the convergence of various trade routes. However, despite of being close to various countries, a great deal of Turkey's export potential is focused on the EU and developed countries. However, the production means in Turkey are not adequate, so it imports factors of production from abroad by way of international business operations. Thus, the aim of this study is to review the theory of globalization, international business, firm internationalization process of businesses, impact direction of multinational businesses as well as the commercial operations of the Turkish enterprises, real and commercial abilities of the Turkish firms and international business activities on the global basis; compare this to its entire trade volume and propose comments on these issues resting on credible national and international publications and figures.1


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document