Take automobiles, for example. In Germany, standard design puts the driver on the left-hand side of the car, since they will be driven on the right-hand side of the road. But in the U.K., automobiles are driven on the left-hand side of the road. Drivers prefer to be positioned on the right-hand side of the car, since that gives them better visibility. To sell into the U.K., German manufacturers must produce automobiles specifically adapted for left-handed roads. For them, this is a cost of doing international business. But it is well worth it, since U.K. drivers favour German cars. According to the Verband der Automobilindustrie, the German automobile manufacturers’ association, German manufacturers have a 50 percent share of the U.K. market.2
Subtle Differences Among Countries Affect International Business
Language differences can raise the cost of doing international business, too. Negotiating a business deal is all but impossible if you only speak English and your potential international business partner only speaks Mandarin. Worldwide, there is growing use of English as the language of business. But not everyone is fluent, so important subtleties can be lost in translation when one side isn’t. Negotiating a trade deal often requires the services of translators.
Even when international business partners themselves speak English, their customers might not. Instruction manuals for products may have to be produced in multiple languages. The Swedish firm IKEA solved this problem by producing instructions for their flat-pack furniture entirely in pictures. But this is not possible for essential safety and technical information in technology products such as computers and smartphones.
Then there are cultural differences. These can be quite subtle, and they affect all parts of the international business relationship. Advertising, for example, may need to be adapted to work in different countries. Advertising campaigns that work well in the U.K. may not work at all in the U.S. due to differences in humour and language,3 or campaigns that make assumptions about lifestyles based on how people live in the U.K. can be incomprehensible to a Chinese audience.4
Lack of international agreement on the status of educational qualifications can also impede international business, particularly in service industries. If, say, an accountancy qualification gained in Gabon is not recognised in the U.K., its holder cannot sell accountancy services to U.K. firms. Lawyers and tax accountants particularly suffer from these kinds of barriers, since countries are intensely protective of their national laws and tax rules.
Perhaps the biggest area of contention over international standards is in intellectual property. Patents granted in the U.K. are not recognised in other countries, opening the door to what firms hoping to sell patented goods in other countries might regard as unfair competition from copies. Often, trade deals try to ensure that patents granted in one country are recognised by all countries that are party to the agreement, thus encouraging international business. But since in effect this means enforcing one country’s patent law in other countries, it can be seen as overriding national laws.
Protectionism Threatens Overseas International Business – But National Differences Create Opportunities for International Trade
Countries can be fiercely protective of local standards, particularly when they are suffering economic difficulties. Raising barriers to international business is sometimes seen as a solution to a domestic slump. If we shut out foreign companies, the thinking goes, domestic businesses will grow and thrive. Impeding international business does not have to mean imposing tariffs; it can simply involve tightening local regulations and adopting policies that favour local businesses over foreign ones. Even if policymakers eschew these measures, encouraging local business with campaigns such as “Buy British” can indirectly dampen overseas business.5
The rising tide of protectionism about which the World Trade Organisation (WTO) has recently expressed concern mainly arises from countries reinforcing local regulation and encouraging local rather than international business.6 This can be bad news for service industries, since overseas services often depend on favourable regulation and a level playing field.
Of course, differences among countries can be advantageous for international business. Marketing companies and advertising agencies, for example, benefit from cultural differences that make standardisation of marketing approaches impossible. Language services – including simultaneous translation facilities – do very well in a multi-language world when overseas business is booming. And where would the global food and restaurant industries be without cultural differences in taste and cooking practice?
Above all, those who work to oil the wheels of international trade – negotiators, lawyers, accountants, supply chain consultants and financial services providers – benefit from the fact that not all differences can be ironed out.
The Takeaway:
Many international businesses would love the world to be fully harmonised. Global standards in property rights, consumer protection, educational qualifications and financial regulation would lower costs and reduce complexity in international business. So would a single global currency, a single global language and a world government. But national differences also create overseas business opportunities, challenging international businesses to diversify and encouraging cross-cultural markets to develop. The challenge is to find the right balance between standardisation and diversity.
Sources
- "The Uruguay Round", World Trade Organisation; https://www.wto.org/english/thewto_e/whatis_e/tif_e/fact5_e.htm
- "Wissmann: German car market grows vigorously", Verband der Automobilindustrie; https://www.vda.de/en/press/press-releases/20160711-German-car-market-grows-vigorously.html
- "Seven culture-defining differences between UK and US ads", The Guardian; https://www.theguardian.com/media-network/2016/jan/08/culture-defining-differences-uk-us-ads
- "Culture in Advertising", Commisceo Global; http://www.commisceo-global.com/blog/culture-in-advertising
- "The Made in Britain Campaign", madeingb.org; http://www.madeingb.org
- Report on G20 trade measures, World Trade Organisation; https://www.wto.org/english/news_e/news16_e/g20_wto_report_june16_e.pdf