1. A company does not need a large size to facilitate, and benefit from, the globalization of
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markets.
TRUE
A company does not have to be the size of multinational giants to facilitate, and benefit from,
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the globalization of markets. In the United States, for example, nearly 90 percent of firms that
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export are small businesses employing less than 100 people, and their share of total U.S.
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exports has grown steadily over the past decade to now exceed 20 percent.
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2. Companies hope to lower their overall cost structure or improve the quality or functionality of
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their product offering through globalization of production.
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TRUE
The globalization of production refers to the sourcing of goods and services from locations
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around the globe to take advantage of national differences in the cost and quality of factors of
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production. By doing this, companies hope to lower their overall cost structure or improve the
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quality or functionality of their product offering, thereby allowing them to compete more
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effectively.
3. The most global markets currently are markets for consumer products.
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FALSE
The most global markets currently are not markets for consumer products—where national
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differences in tastes and preferences are still often important enough to act as a brake on
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globalization—but markets for industrial goods and materials that serve a universal need the
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world over. f
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Education.
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4. Outsourcing is a process that is limited to manufacturing enterprises.
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FALSE
Early outsourcing efforts were primarily confined to manufacturing activities. Increasingly,
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however, companies are taking advantage of modern communications technology, particularly
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the Internet, to outsource service activities to low-cost producers in other nations.
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5. The World Bank has focused on policing the world trading system and making sure nation-
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states adhere to the rules laid down in trade treaties.
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FALSE
The World Trade Organization is primarily responsible for policing the world trading system
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and making sure nation-states adhere to the rules laid down in trade treaties signed by WTO
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member states. The World Bank was set up to promote economic development.
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6. The World Bank is known as the lender of the last resort.
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FALSE
The IMF was established to maintain order in the international monetary system. It is often
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seen as the lender of last resort to nation-states whose economies are in turmoil and whose
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currencies are losing value against those of other nations.
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Education.
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7. One of the UN's central mandates is the promotion of higher standards of living, full
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employment, and conditions of economic and social progress and development.
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TRUE
Although the UN is perhaps best known for its peacekeeping role, one of the organization's
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central mandates is the promotion of higher standards of living, full employment, and
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conditions of economic and social progress and development—all issues that are central to
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the creation of a vibrant global economy.
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8. The Uruguay Round, finalized in December 1993, reduced protection for patents, trademarks,
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and copyrights.
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FALSE
Under the umbrella of GATT, the most recent negotiations to be completed, known as the
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Uruguay Round, were finalized in December 1993. The Uruguay Round provided enhanced
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protection for patents, trademarks, and copyrights.
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9. "Beggar thy neighbor" retaliatory trade policies involved countries progressively lowering trade
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barriers against each other, which contributed to the Great Depression of the 1930s.
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FALSE
The typical aim of tariffs on imports of manufactured goods was to protect domestic
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industries from foreign competition. One consequence, however, was "beggar thy neighbor"
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retaliatory trade policies, with countries progressively raising trade barriers against each
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other. Ultimately, this depressed world demand and contributed to the Great Depression of
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the 1930s.
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Education.