Doing Business in Today's India


Book Description

As the world business climate globalizes and national economies become closely interlinked, India looms as the largest country in the world to embrace the market economy. Bullis maintains that not only will India be changed by international market forces, it will have a significant impact upon the world economy as it emerges as a mass consumer market and an extended, low-cost manufacturing center. But India has problems that pose difficulties for offshore investors. Only with a clear idea of Indian business thinking and the relationship of commerce to India's complex mix of traditional, caste, and religious practices can businesspeople from the West gain any real hope of success. This work provides the sort of far-reaching information and advice essential for international businesspeople and for researchers and scholars in the academic community who want to be a part of India's economic future. Bullis asserts that Indian businesspeople are far more knowledgeable about international markets than most international businesspeople are about India. Yet, India's long period of socialist dormancy produced very different concepts of management, employee relations, the role of competition, marketing, finance, and business-government relations. All these factors will play critical roles in the success or failure of investment plans formulated outside India's borders. Moreover, Indian people have a more diverse and compartmentalized culture than any other people, posing a marketing challenge (and challenges of other kinds) that outsiders may be ill-equipped to handle. Bullis's descriptions and analyses of the Indian economy, social structure, history, and business practices will provide the kind of understandings that Westerners need to enter the Indian market and compete successfully.




Doing Business in Today's Hong Kong


Book Description

As an important market for American goods and services, as well as an excellent base of operations for business with the People's Republic of China and other East Asian nations, Hong Kong offers many commercial attractions, including totally free markets, a modern global communications system, major banking facilities, an extensive transportation network, and skilled English-speaking personnel. While foreign businesses can easily begin operations in Hong Kong, a basic knowledge of Hong Kong and its ground rules vastly improves firms' capabilities and prospects. Prepared by the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong--an international group of investors representing over 1000 foreign companies operating in Hong Kong--Doing Business in Today's Hong Kong provides an essential source of information for newcomers to Hong Kong and veterans alike. It includes articles by attorneys from multinational firms, accountants, members of executive search firms, consultants with Hong Kong Government-subvented business support organizations, bankers, textile and apparel manufacturers, China trade consultants, and independent entrepreneurs based in the territory but also holding global investments. Focusing on the issues which business people in Hong Kong face, the contributors discuss what makes Hong Kong such a crucial meeting place for the economic powers of the world and how Hong Kong has begun to develop its role in the broad spectrum of industries in which it participates. Doing Business in Today's Hong Kong will help people both in Hong Kong and the United States, as well as in other countries, to understand more fully the business opportunities in the world's foremost free and fair trade city market.




Hong Kong Business


Book Description

An enclyclopedic view of doing business with Hong Kong. Contains the how-to, where-to and who-with information needed to operate internationally.




Doing Business in Hong Kong


Book Description




Technology, Learning, and Innovation


Book Description

In this volume leading scholars analyze in a series of original essays and commentaries how newly industrializing countries (NICs), particularly those in East Asia, have transformed themselves from technologically backward and poor to relatively modern and affluent economies over the past thirty years. The contributors provide interesting theoretical perspectives and offer insights into the process of technological progress at both the macro and micro levels in these countries. The essays review how firms, particularly those in electronics and automobiles, have dynamically accumulated technological capabilities at the micro level, how public policies have shaped the process of technological progress at the national level, and what problems some of these countries face today at both levels. In addition, the volume provides a comparison of East Asian NIC s with their Latin American counterparts. The discussion also offers useful lessons for policies in other developing countries.




Small Business Management and Entrepreneurship in Hong Kong


Book Description

The case studies are topically diverse, and span a range of managerial functions and sectors. This casebook is an anthology of 28 cases from the series. The cases are written with a strong management perspective to offer a practical and interesting look at how successful entrepreneur-managers in Hong Kong systematically generate innovations in the shape of successful new products, services, processes and technologies when faced with various organizational and environmental challenges. They constitute a comprehensive self-contained course of study; each case can also be considered on its own.




Doing Business in Hong Kong


Book Description