Transcript Slide 1
Market - Regions Objectives of Developing Countries • Industrialization is the fundamental objective of most developing countries • Economic growth is seen as the achievement of social as well as economic goals – – – – Better education Better and more effective government Elimination of many social inequities Improvements in moral and ethical responsibilities • Privatization is the norm and currently a major economic phenomenon in industrialized as well as in developing countries Marketing’s Contributions • Marketing fits between productive capacity and consumer demand • The marketing process is the critical element in effectively utilizing production resulting from economic growth • Marketing is instrumental in laying the groundwork for effective distribution Marketing in a Developing Country (1 of 4) • Marketing efforts must be keyed to each situation and custom tailored to each set of circumstances – A promotional program for a population that is 50% illiterate is vastly different from a program for a population that is 95% literate http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/edu_ill_r at_by_sex_age_15-illiteracy-rates-sex-aged15 https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/theworld-factbook/geos/ar.html http://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/statistics Marketing in a Developing Country (2 of 4) • In evaluating the potential in a developing country, the marketer must look at two areas: – Level of market development – Demand in developing countries Marketing in a Developing Country (3 of 4) • Level of market development – Marketer must evaluate existing level of market development and receptiveness – The more developed an economy, the greater the variety of marketing functions demanded, and the more sophisticated and specialized the institutions become to perform marketing functions – Part of the marketer’s task when studying an economy is to determine what in the foreign environment will be useful and how much adjustment will be necessary to carry out stated objectives Marketing in a Developing Country (4 of 4) • Demand in developing countries - Three distinct kinds of markets in each country • Traditional rural/agricultural sector • Modern urban/high-income sector • Transitional sector usually represented by low-income urban slums Strategic Implications for Marketing (1 of 2) • A vast population of the emerging market are viable customers with expanding income • As a country develops – Incomes change – Population concentrations shift – Expectations for a better life adjust to higher standards – New infrastructures evolve – Social capital investments made • When incomes rise, new demand is generated at all income levels for everything from soap to cars Strategic Implications for Marketing (2 of 2) • The “$10,000 Club” is group of consumers with homogenous demands who share a common knowledge of products and brands • If a company fails to appreciate the strategic implications of the $10,000 Club, it will miss the opportunity to participate in the world’s fastestgrowing global consumer segment • Markets are changing rapidly, and identifiable market segments with similar consumption patterns are found across many countries Group question You want to sell men’s face cream. What country would you sell it in? Geographic and Temporal Proximity and Cultural Factors • Geographic and temporal proximity – Recent research demonstrates that differences across time zones are more important than physical distances – Trade tends to travel more easily in north-south directions then it did in ancient times – Countries that are widely separated geographically have major barriers to overcome in attempting economic fusion • Cultural factors – The more similar the culture, the more likely a market is to succeed because members understand the outlook and viewpoints of their colleagues Patterns of Multinational Cooperation (1 of 3) • Regional cooperation groups – Governments agree to participate jointly to develop basic industries beneficial to each economy • Free trade area – An agreement between two or more countries • To reduce or eliminate customs duties and nontariff trade barriers among partner countries • Members maintain individual tariff schedules for external countries Patterns of Multinational Cooperation (2 of 3) • Customs union – Enjoys free trade area’s reduced or eliminated internal tariffs – Adds a common external tariff on products imported from countries outside the union • Common market – Eliminates all tariffs and other restrictions on internal trade, – Adopts a set of common external tariffs – Removes all restrictions on the free flow of capital and labor among member nations Patterns of Multinational Cooperation (3 of 3) • Political union – Involves complete political and economic integration, either voluntary or enforced – Commonwealth – a voluntary organization that provides for the loosest possible relationship classified as economic integration – Two new political unions came into existence in the 1990s • The Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) • The European Union (EU) Big Emerging Markets (BRICKS) (1 of 2) • The U.S. Department of Commerce estimates that over 75% of the expected growth in world trade over the next two decades will come from the more than 130 developing and newly industrialized countries • Big emerging markets share important traits – – – – – – – – Are all geographically large Have significant populations Represent sizable markets for a wide range of products Have strong rates of growth or the potential for significant growth Have undertaken significant programs of economic reform Are of major political importance within their regions Are regional economic drivers Will engender further expansions in neighboring markets as the grow Big Emerging Markets (2 of 2) • BRICKS include Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. Others include Mexico, Turkey, Poland • Different from developing countries in that they import more than smaller markets and more than economies of similar size • Because many BEMs lack modern infrastructure, much of the expected growth will be in industrial sectors such as, information technology, environmental technology, transportation, energy technology, healthcare technology, and financial services The Americas - NAFTA • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA – Canada, Mexico, and the United States) – A single market of 360 million people with a $6 trillion GNP – Ratified and became effective in 1994 – Requires the removal of all tariffs and barriers to trade over 15 years – All tariff barriers dropped in 2008 – Improves all aspects of doing business within North America – Creates one of the largest and richest markets in the world The Americas – DR-CAFTA • United States – Central American Free Trade Agreement-Dominican Republic Free Trade Agreement (DR-CAFTA – Costa Rica, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua, and the United States) • Aimed at increasing trade and employment between the seven countries by reducing tariffs The Americas – MERCOSUR • Southern Cone Free Trade Area (MERCOSUR – Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, and Uruguay) • The Treaty of Asuncion, which provided the legal basis for MERCOSUR, was signed in 1991 and formally inaugurated in 1995 • Second-largest common-market agreement in the Americas after NAFTA • Market of 22o million with a combined GDP of $1 trillion The Americas – Latin American Progress • Most of the countries in Latin America have moved from military dictatorships to democratically elected governments in the last three decades • Protectionism has given way to privatization and other economic, monetary, and trade policy reforms • Because of its size (population of 600 million is nearly twice that of the United States and 100 million more than the European Community) and resource base, the Latin American market has always been considered to have great economic and market possibilities The Americas – Latin American Economic Cooperation • Latin American Integration Association (LAIA) • Its long term goal is a gradual and progressive establishment of a Latin American common market • It allows members to establish bilateral trade agreements among member countries • Caribbean Community and Common Market (C ARICOM) • Aim is to achieve true regional integration even having a common currency for all members • It continues to seek stronger ties with other groups in Latin America and has singed a trade agreement with Cuba Economic and Monetary Union (EMU) • It established the parameters of the creating of a common currency for the EU, the “Euro” and established a timetable for its implementation • In 2002, a central bank was established, conversion rates were fixed, circulation of Euro bank notes and coins was completed and the legal tender status of participating members’ bank notes and coins was cancelled Eastern Europe and the Baltic States • Eastern Europe and the Baltic states, satellite nations of the former Soviet Union, have moved steadily toward establishing post communist market reforms • New business opportunities are emerging almost daily, and the region is described as anywhere from chaotic with big risks to an exciting place with untold opportunities • Countries in both these regions continue to adjust to the political, social, and economic realities of changing from the restrictions of a Marxistsocialist system to some version of free markets and capitalism Eastern Europe • It is dangerous to generalize about eastern Europe because each of the countries has its own economic problems and is at a different stage in its evolution from a socialist to a market-driven economy • Most eastern European countries are privatizing state-owned enterprises, establishing free market pricing systems, relaxing import controls and wrestling with inflation • The Czech Republic has fared better than other eastern European countries; Yugoslavia has been plagued with ethnic violence; some countries have become members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) The Baltic States • Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania are prime examples of the difference that right policies can make. All three countries started off with roughly the same legacy of inefficient industry and Soviet-style command economies • Since 1991, Estonia’ s economic reform policy has led to a liberalized, nearly tariff-free, open-market economy • The most significant hurdle for U.S. trade and investment has been government bureaucracy, corruption, and organize crime, found in Latvia and Lithuania • All three countries are members of WTO and, as of 2004, EU members The Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) • Formed after aborted coup against Gorbachev and dissolution of USSR – Included the remaining 12 republics after the formation of the Baltic States • The CIS is a loose economic and political alliance with open borders but no central government • The 12 members of the CIS share a common history of central planning – Their close cooperation could make the change to a market economy less painful – Differences over economic policy, currency reform, and control of the military Regional Groups - Africa • Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) – 15-nation group – Plagued with financial problems, conflict within the group, and inactivity • Southern African Development Community (SADC) – Most advanced and viable of Africa’s regional organizations • East African Community (EAC) Opportunities • Large markets are particularly important to businesses accustomed to mass production and mass distribution because of the economies of scale and marketing efficiencies that can be achieved • Most multinational groups have coordinated programs to foster economic growth as part of their cooperative efforts so as to take advantage of increasing purchasing power, improving regional infrastructure, and fostering economic development Marketing Mix Implications • In the past, companies often charged different prices in different European markets such as Colgate Palmolive • As long as products from lower-priced markets could not move to higher-priced markets, differential price schemes worked as in the case of Badedas Shower Gel • Companies initiating uniform pricing policies are reducing the number of brands to focus on advertising and promotion efforts as with Nestle and Unilever The People’s Republic of China (PRC) (1 of 2) • Aside from the United States and Japan, there is no more important single national market than the PRC • The PRC with a dual economic system, embracing socialism along with many tenets of capitalism, has produced an economic boom with expanded opportunity for foreign investment • Its GNP averaged nearly 10% since 1970 and is predicted to be around 8 – 10% in the next 10 to 15 years, equaling that of the US by 2015 The People’s Republic of China (PRC) (2 of 2) • Two major events that occurred in 2000 had a profound effect on China’s economy: – Admission to the World Trade Organization (WTO) – US granting normal trade relations (NTR) to China on a permanent basis (PNTR) • Two steps China must take if its road to economic growth must be smooth: – Improving human rights – Reforming the legal system Marketing Opportunities in Greater China • Across this vast land of opportunity, there are extreme differences in economic wellbeing, cultures, and political structures • The following sectors are great for American exporters: – Automotive components, cleaner coal, construction equipment, education and training services, machine tools, marine industries, healthcare, water and wastewater treatment, rail equipment, renewable energy, and green building • Finally, the influence of national government policies and regulations of marketing will often be minor compared with that of their local Hong Kong • After 155 years of British rule, Hong Kong reverted to China in 1997, when it became a special administrative region (SAR) of the PRC • Hong Kong is given a high degree of autonomy. It negotiates bilateral agreements which are then “confirmed” by the PRC0 and makes major economic decisions on its own Taiwan, The ROC • Both Taiwan and China continue to implement WTO provisions between themselves • Taiwan companies have invested over $50 billion in China, and about 250,000 Taiwanese-run factories are responsible for about 12% of China’s exports • Trade helps out both countries: Taiwanese companies face rising costs at home - China offers a nearly limitless pool of cheap labor and engineering talent. Japan • Japan’s fast growth in the 1970s and 1980s amazed the world. Then came the early 1990s, and Japan’s economy produced a stunning surprise: it slowed, sputtered, and stalled • Four explanatory themes have emerged: – – – – Faulty economic policies Inept political apparatus Disadvantages due to global circumstances Cultural inhibitions Global Circumstances • Japanese population is shrinking faster than the U.S. In 2005, while American baby boomers were at their peak of productivity, the Japanese were about 10 years ahead to population declines and graying hair • Serious disadvantage in the information age: its complex language (three alphabet system) hindered software innovations • With historically low real prices of oil and the U.S. peak consumption level of SUVs, Japan was late to tap this market The Cultural Explanation • The lack of a national goal for Japan plagued them after successfully building themselves from the ruins of World War II • The Japanese management culture such as, lifetime employment, job promotion based not on merit but on length of service, reciprocal contractor/subcontractor loyalties, hindered their adjustment to the new economic era India • The following steps have already been taken: – Privatizing state-owned companies ; reducing stake to about 51% – Recasting the telecom sector’s regulatory authority and demolishing the monopolies enjoyed by SOEs – Signing a trade agreement with the U.S. to lift all quantitative restrictions on imports – Planning the opening of domestic long-distance phone services, housing, and real estate and retail trading sectors to foreign direct investment India • India still presents a difficult business environment – Tariffs are well above those of developing world norms – Inadequate protection of intellectual property rights – Anti-business attitudes of India’s federal and state bureaucracies continue to hinder potential investors and plague their routine operations – Delay by policymakers on selling money-losing SOEs, making labor laws flexible, and deregulating banking India • But India presents a lot of opportunities – Massive market (over 1 billion, second in size only to China) – Cheap and qualified labor – Knowledge of English – Educated middle class numbering 250 million (college graduates, scientists, engineers, etc) – Supplier and exporter of expertise in all areas of information technology – Time zone puts India in a competitive position with their European counterparts (they work while Americans sleep) Asia Pacific Trade Associations • Once a source of inexpensive labor for products shipped to Japan or to third markets, countries in the Asia Pacific region are now seen as viable markets • Three free trade associations in this region: – Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) – ASEAN+3 (ASEAN members plus ministers from China, Japan, and South Korea) – Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)(1 of 2) • Goals of the ASEAN – Operating within a free trade area – The ability to sell in an entire region without differing tariff and nontariff barriers – Distribution can be centralized at the most cost-effective point rather than having distribution points dictated by tariff restrictions – Pricing can be more consistent, which helps reduce smuggling and parallel importing – Marketing can become more regionally and centrally managed Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) • APEC was formed in 1989 – Provides formal structure for major governments to discuss mutual interests in open trade and economic collaboration – Includes all major economies of the region and the most dynamic, fastest-growing economies in the world • Common goal and commitment to: – – – – – Open trade Increase economic collaboration Sustain regional growth and development Strengthen the multilateral trading system Reduce barriers to investment and trade without detriment to other economies