The Nine Major Ways of Doing Business in the World
A new measure for
gauging and understanding the challenge of business abroad.
There is a simple
truth in international business: All else being equal, the more similar the
host country abroad to the home country of a firm, the more likely is success.
It is a lot easier, for instance, for a Spanish firm to do well in Portugal
than in Switzerland.
For firms and
internationally active managers, this places a premium on knowing just how different
markets abroad are. In addition, it is helpful to know what drives these
differences so suitable adjustment strategies can be devised and implemented.
Exploring these
questions has been a central theme of a rich and growing literature about
“national business systems” and “varieties of capitalism”. In our paper, “Mapping the
business systems of 61 major economies”, my five co-authors and I provide
the currently most comprehensive overview and categorisation of differences in
the ways of doing business.
Spanning all
continents save Antarctica, our sample comprises 61 economies, equivalent to
93.5 percent of the world GDP. Based on statistics and expert insights, we
assessed these economies on eight dimensions that research had previously shown
to be key: education and skill formation, employment relations, finance,
interfirm relations, internal dynamics, ownership and governance, social
capital, and the role of the state.
Using cluster
analysis, we found nine main types of business systems in the world,
listed below. No progression from left to right is implied, the table merely
replicates the order in which the cluster analysis presented the groups.
Here is a brief
overview of these clusters, highlighting a few selected points from the full
discussion in our paper:
1. Socialist
Economies: Comprising Cuba and Venezuela, this cluster features very low
inward foreign direct investment, as well as very weak union rights, investor
protection, and rule of law.
2. Emerging
Economies: This is the largest cluster, with 21 geographically
heterogeneous countries, from Argentina to the Philippines. They notably share
relatively low levels of per-capita GDP, with oil and gas-rich Russia as an
outlier.
3. Arab Oil-based
Economies: While attempting to diversify, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the
United Arab Emirates still mostly rely on oil production and exports. There are
important roles for family and state ownership.
4. Advanced City
Economies: Hong Kong and Singapore are the only two city-based
economies of sufficient size to be included in our sample. Both are trade-dependent
hub economies with high levels of economic freedom and government
effectiveness.
5. Advanced Emerging
Economies: Despite their geographical distance, Chile, Israel, Korea, South
Africa, Taiwan and Turkey have many commonalities, including decent levels of
general education, medium-length employment tenures, as well as on-the-job and
private vocational training.
6. European
Peripheral Economies: These business systems include the Southern European
economies as well as the Central European economies west of Ukraine. They have
long-term average employment tenures, average levels of investor protection and
medium to high rule of law.
7. Liberal Market
Economies: In this cluster, which comprises the United States, Canada,
the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand, finance is
market-driven and decision making, top-down. Employment tends to be short-term
with an emphasis on transferable skills so people can easily change jobs.
8. Coordinated Market
Economies: This group of nine European countries features bank-based
finance and long-term employment, among other characteristics. Internal
decision making tends to be consensual, and companies cooperate extensively
across firm boundaries.
9. Highly Coordinated
Economies: While being close to the coordinated market economies, Japan
stands out as a cluster of one. The reason for this is that arrangements
between management and labour, such as wage negotiations, mostly happen at the
firm level, leaving national concertation prominent in Coordinated Market
Economies with a much smaller role.
A score measuring the
relative challenge of doing business in another economy
While the main goal
of our paper was to contribute to theory, it has important practical
implications. Our eight-dimension analysis of 61 economies yielded a matrix of
scores – so-called “institutional distances” – quantifying just how differently
businesses are run, on aggregate, from one country to the next.
In this matrix, the
higher the score (max. 1 and min. 0), the larger the aggregate difference
between a given pair of countries.
Australia’s ways of doing business are most dissimilar from those of Bangladesh
(0.60) and very similar to those of Canada (0.06).
It enables firms and
executives from any of the 61 economies covered to assess the magnitude of the
challenges of operating in any of the other 60 economies – for instance, France
is most similar to Italy, Switzerland to Denmark, and the United States to
Australia. The text of our paper can then be used to gain a fuller
understanding of what drives these differences.
We believe that these
scores can, and should, inform international investment decisions. While many
factors drive investments, success in operating abroad is often contingent on
how well a firm can interface with, and selectively adapt to, the foreign way
of doing business. The international business literature has shown that the
greatest challenge for doing business abroad is what is known as “liability of
foreignness” – not knowing how to run the business in the host country. The
matrix provides a heuristic for the magnitude of the challenge.
The scores should similarly be useful
for executives preparing themselves for international assignments. Savvy
executives will, of course, over time pick up on the differences expressed in
the institutional distance scores and the text of our paper. However, our
findings should help accelerate this process and increase chances of success.
Michael A. Witt, INSEAD Affiliate Professor of
Strategy and International Business | September 8, 2017
Read more at https://knowledge.insead.edu/strategy/the-nine-major-ways-of-doing-business-in-the-world-7086?utm_source=INSEAD+Knowledge&utm_campaign=1216759296-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_09_14&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_e079141ebb-1216759296-249840429#BmVdkkkbgA4KAXIP.99
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