2010/2011 KAN-AEF_AE41 The Firm in a Global Environment
English Title | |
The Firm in a Global Environment |
Course Information | |
Language | English |
Point | 7,5 ECTS (225 SAT) |
Type | Mandatory |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Course Period |
Autumn
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Time Table | Please see course schedule at e-Campus |
Study Board |
Study Board for MSc in Economics and Business Administration |
Course Coordinator | |
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Main Category of the Course | |
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Last updated on 29 maj 2012 |
Learning Objectives | |||||||||
The course focuses on the international opportunities that a firm faces, viz. whether a firm will choose to export, invest abroad, or license its production abroad. While these types of issues are central in any standard international trade course, the focus in these courses is usually at the country level and thus how trade affects the country in question. Our attempt here is to bring the firm at the forefront of the analysis, and highlight how global opportunities affect firms’ decisions. A central element of the course is to document that the internationalisation of the firm is an endogenous choice that accrues to the most efficient firms. As it is well known, firms have several possibilities when they want to serve international markets. The course investigates the reasons for why firms choose to export their products rather than serving them by producing directly in that market (through a direct foreign investment). The existent literature provides several possible explanations of what makes firms decide to locate in a particular country (the comparative advantage hypothesis, the home-market effect, increasing returns to scale (internal or external to the firms), economic geography), and as such they will be reviewed in order to provide a comprehensive understanding of the location decision. | |||||||||
Examination | |||||||||
The Firm in a Global Environment | |||||||||
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Examination | |||||||||
Prerequisites for Attending the Exam | |||||||||
Course Content | |||||||||
Comparative advantage; increasing returns to scale; home-market effect; outsourcing; multinational enterprises. Students are required to | |||||||||
Literature | |||||||||
To be arranged in 2010. See e-campus for early information. |