INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS XIBMS MBA EXAM ANSWER SHEET PROVIDED
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Xaviers Institute
of Business Management Studies
MARKS: 100
.
SUB: International
Business.
International Business
Section A (8 Marks Each
Question) ( Attempt any 5 )
1. What are basic differences between domestic and
international business?
2. While some see globalization as the avenue to the
development of poor nations, others see it intensifying misery and
inequalities. Critically examine the above statement in today's context?
3. Explain - Localisation of global strategy
4. Explain - Technology contracting (licensing) as an
alternative to FDI or ownership strategy.
5. Explain - Major factors contributing to the success of
international strategic alliances.
6. Explain the role of “Power Distance" in
understanding Hofsted's work on cross-cultural prospective. How does this help
in managing international environment?
7. Discuss the relationship between an MNE and its
subsidiaries in the context of the "make or buy" decision. What are
the implications so far as the organization structure/design is concerned?
8. Explain the role of bargaining power" in managing
negotiations in international business.
9. Briefly discuss the direct and indirect impacts of FDI
on LDCs
SECTION B (20 Marks Each
Case)
6. Please read the following
case study carefully and answer the questions given at the end.
SEN-SCHWITZ
To the Florid-faced German at
Frankfurt Airport's immigration-counter, he appeared to be just another
business traveller. True, but a bit of an understatement. The man under
scrutiny was Binoy Sen, whom the Indian media referred to as the Boom-Box king.
At
14, he had assembled, from parts scavenged from the local dump, a
spool-recorder that had fitted nicely into a suitcase. By the time he time he
was 37, in 1979, Sen & Sen (S&S), a company he had promoted with his
elder brother, Sanjoy --- who made up for his lack of technical expertise with
a razor sharp business brain --- was Asia's largest manufacturer of radios and
cassette-recorders. Now, at 56, he presided over India's largest audio-Products
Company. Sen-Schwitz, a joint venture with the Frankfurt-based consumer
electronics giant, Schwitz GMBH.
S&S association with
Schwitz had actually begun in 1984. Music had become a movement in Europe at
that time, with immigrant labour of all colour and teenagers of all sizes
constituting market-segments that no company could afford to ignore. But their
means were slender, and intensity of output, rather than nuances of pitch and
tone, was what they were concerned about. Since assembling was a labour and
cost intensive process, at least in Europe, Schwitz could not manufacture
low-end boom-boxes cheaply.
So, the company turned to Asia,
where it was certain some Chinese or Taiwanese company could meet its
requirements. None could. However, on a reach of Taiwan, one of the company's
managers had spotted a couple of S&S products at a retail outlet. While
this Indo-German relationship had begun as a vendor-buyer one, Helmut Schwitz,
51, the CEO of Schwitz --- no relation of Adolf Schwitz, who had founded the
company just after the end of World War II --- took an instant liking to the
Sen brothers. Two years after S&S started supplying it products, in 1986,
the German company acquired a 10 per cent stake in its Indian supplier.
IN 1992, when Schwitz released
that he could no longer ignore the Indian market and the Sens accepted the fact
that they couldn't survive the threat from global competition without technology
and marketing support from their German Partner, they formed a formal joint
venture. The Sens and the German company both held 26 per cent stakes in
Sen-Schwitz, with the rest being divided between the financial institutions and
the investing.
The joint venture did well
right from its inception. The transnational's superior quality standards and
S&S strong distribution network worked wonders. Within 2 years, the company
had managed to carve out a 45 per cent share of the Rs. 795-crore market. The
Sens were happy and so was Schwitz. By 1998, Sen Schwitz's share had increased
to 65 per cent in a market that had grown to Rs. 1,150 crore, And when Sen
reached Frankfurt for the annual review of the joint venture that Schwitz GMBH
insisted on --- the company had 7 joint ventures across Asia and Latin America
--- he could not but help feeling that all was well with the world of music and
money.
Sen's feelings were only
amplified during the review. After the preliminary greetings, Helmut Schwiz
took the oais. The room darkened, and a series of PowerPoint images flashed on
the screen behind Schwiz as he spoke. Sen caught only fragments of the German's
heavily accented voice, his attention was focused on the images and the bullets
of text they contained. Sen scrawled a few of them on his notepad
*
A turnover of $ 100 billion by 2005
* AQ growth - rate of 20 per
cent a year.
* 35 per cent of the growth
coming from India and China Then. Schwiz started speaking about India and Sen's
attention moved from the screen to the man. What he heard pleased him.
"Sen-Schwiz has a marketshare of 65 per cent in a market that is growing
at the rate of 30 per cent a year. As far as our targets for 2005 go, we
believe that it is our most promising joint venture."
The blow fell later, during the
break for lunch. Sen and Chris Liu who headed the company's joint venture in
Taiwan, were exchanging notes when Schwiz butted in and, in his characteristic
overbearing fashion, quickly monoeuvrec Sen to one corner of the room.
"India is, clearly, the
market of the future, Binoy," he said, biting into a roll. "You're
doing a great job, and can expect support from me for all your endeavours. But
I'm worried about your margins." Here it comes, thought Sen, the twist in the
tall. "A post tax margin of 8 per cent doesn't look too good,"
continued Schwiz, "especially when seen in the light of rising volumes. We
should take a fresh look at our Indian operations, Why don't you meet with
Andrew?"
Suddenly, Sen was on guard. The
55 year old Andrew Fotheringay was Schwiz's President (International
Operations). Sen liked him; they had worked together when the joint venture was
being set up, and had been impressed by his eye for detail. But he also knew
that Fotheringay was Schwiz's hatchetman. "What's on your mind, Helmut
?" he asked point-blank "oh, nothing yet," replied Schwiz,
"but we have to find a way to introduce more products into the Indian
market without stretching Sen-Schwitz, Talk to Andrew."
That wasn't to be Fotheringay,
whose wife was 9 months pregnant, had to suddenly leave for London, but
promised to fly down to Calcutta, where Sen-Schwitz was based as soon as the
baby was born. Now, Sen was sure that something was up : Fotheringay wasn't the
kind of manager to do something like that for nothing. Sen voiced his fears at
a meeting of the Sen-Schwitz board, which had been scheduled on the day of his
return. One of the board members, R. Raghavan, 53 a professor of corporate
strategy at the Indian Institute of Management, Gauhati, felt that Sen was over
reaching I don't think it is quite what you think, Sanjoy he started although
Sen hadn't put any specifics to his fears. "Sen-Schwitz is, as BUSINESS
TODAY keeps reminding us, evidence that there is, indeed, scope for a win-win
joint venture even in the Indian context."
He was wrong. Sure, the joint
venture has benefited from the German parent's technical expertise. In turn
Schwitz GMBH had profited substantially from Sen Schwitz's dividend pay-outs :
more than 25 per cent every year. Werner Kohl, 48 Sen Schwitz's Technical
Director, seemed to agree with the professor. Kohl was a Schwitz nominee on the
board, and had been a Vice-president (Operations) at the transnational's
Hamburg plant before being seconded to Sen-Schwitz for a 5 year period. But
Kohl Sen knew was not likely to know what was happening back home.
The
one person who agred with Sen was Rajesh Jain 44, the IDBI nominee on the
board, who expressed the opinion that Schwiz GMBH could possiibly, be planning
another joint venture with some other company. That sounded far-fetched even to
Sen. Sen-Schwitz's closest per cent. Besides, no company could match
Sen-Schwitz;'s distribution network. So, he decided to let his fears abate till
Fotneringay could either dispet them --- or make them come alive.
True to his word, Fotheringay,
now the proud father of his first daughter landed up in Calcutta a week later.
He first met the company's functional heads, and gave them a pep talk: "
Sen-Schwitz's volumes-thrust should be backed by a profitability focus. Once we
ensure margins of 13 to 15 per cent, we will be on our way."
Alone with Sen, though,
Fotheringay quickly laid his cards on the table. Schwitz, he informed Sen,
wished to set up a 100 per cent subsidiary in the country. Sen's mind was,
suddenly, clear. He had been a fool not to see it coming. All that talk about
restructuring the joint venture, introducing newer models, and the need for
higher margins led up to just one thing: a fully-owned Schwiz subsidiary."
So what does this mean for us, Andrew," he asked, "Is this advance
warning about a parting of ways?"
Fotheringay was quick to dispel
this notion. "The subsidiary will not compromise the interests of the
joint venture. Schwitz has a long-term commitment to the India market, and this
subsidiary is just a step in that director."
All this talk-about commitment,
realized Sen, was taking them nowhere. He sounded just a little imitated when
he spoke: "I just can't understand why you people are even considering a
subsidiary when the joint venture has been so successful. We have a great
brand, good products, the finest distribution network in the business, and an
excellent supply chain Together, we have created a matrix that has delivered.
Why does Schwitz want to reinvent the wheel?"
Fotheringay's answers didn't
satisfy him. He made some noises about the subsidiary taking upon itself a
large portion of the expenses involved in building the Sen-Schwitz brand,
thereby reducing its operational expenses, and improving its margins. Sen was
quick to point out that the Government of India did not view proposals for
fully-owned marketing subsidiaries favourably. "Besides, does this mean
that we transfer our marketing and distribution network to the
subsidiary?" he asked incredulously.
Fotheringay side-stepped the
issue: "No, no, the subsidiary will only manufacturer products."
Reading the look on Sen's face, he hastened to enumerate Schwitz's gameplan:
'Of course, none of our offerings will complete directly with Sen-Schwitz As
you are aware,the audio systems market is fairly segmented, so there is a great
deal of potential for new offerings. We want to set up a committee from
Sen-Schwitz and Schwitz to decide on the respective roadmaps of the joint
venture and the subsidiary so as to avoid any conflict."
"That apart," he
smiled, here comes the carrot, thought Sen and he wasn't wrong,"the Sens
will have the option to buy upto 49 per cent of the subsidiary's equity when it
goes in for an
IPO."
The subsidiary is not even off the ground, thought Sen and Andrew is already
speaking in terms of US and THEM
Fotheringay took Sen's silence
to mean acceptance."The other reason," he continued, "is that we
cam use the subsidiary to introduce our premium brands into the country. There
is evidence that the market for premium audio-systems is all set to boom. Think
about it, Binoy. The subsidiary will only strengthen the strategic relationship
between the Sens and Schwitz GMBH."
The Sens aren't involved,
thought Sen; this is an issue that concern Sen-Schwiz andSchqitz. But he didn't
want to split hairs, and promised, instead, to think about it.
Sen-Schwitz's Executive
Committee thought about it for 3 months. And it still didn't make sense to
them. Schwitz GMBH operated through joint ventures in every part of the
developing world. Only in the US, UK, and France did it have fully-owned
subsidiaries, using the subsidiary as a sink that would absorb the joint
venture's marketing expenses didn't make sense too.
"It sounds
altruistic," said V.K. Kapur, 44, the company's head of marketing.
"If launching more products is the only behind the subsidiary, there is no
reason why the joint venture cannot serve that purpose." Sen and the rest
of the Committee had to agree. "There's also no reason why we cannot
improve our margins by focusing on our operational efficiencies," argued
Ajay Singh, 46, Sen Schwitz Director, operations, and Sen had to agree.
He decided to discuss the
matter with Sanjoy, who had retired from the business, and was involved in
managing a charity. But Sen didn't get a chance. News-agency had picked up a
report that had appeared in the Financial Times Schwitz's decision to set up a
100 per cent subsidiary in India. The report created a major stir in the Bombay
stock Exchange, with the price of Sen-Schwitz's stock falling by 30 per cent a
day.
It was evident to Sen that no
matter what Fotheringay and Schwitz thought, the stock-market perceived the
subsidiary as a threat to the joint venture. It was also evident that the
stock-market viewed Schwitz as the more valuable brand."I
understand,"Sanjoy told Binoy, when the situation had been explained to
him. The technology is Schwitz's. The brand, at least the more powerful one, is
theirs. And they have access to our distribution network. Face it, we don't have
a plank to fight on."
Questions:
(a)
Identify
the sequence of events that has led to the current problem. (b) Analyse the
problem in the context of the process of globalization that has been
increasingly witnesses over the past decade or so. (c) Examine the
"fairness" of establishing a 100% subsidiary by Schwitz GMBH when the
alliance is on. (d) What future course of action would you suggest to S&S?
Give reasons for your answer.
7. Please read the following
case study carefully and answer the questions given at the end.
Sunlight Chemicals
Starting at the vast expanse of
the Arabian Sea from his comer office at Bombay's Nariman Point, Ramcharan
Shukla the 53-year old executive vice-chairman and managing Director of the
500-crore Sunlight Chemicals. (Sunlight felt both adventurous and apprehensive.
He knew he had to quicken the global strides Sunlight had made in the last four
years if the company was to benefit from its early gains in the world markets.
However, he was also shaken by a doubt: would his strategy of prising open
international markets by leveraging the talents of a breed of managers with
transnational competencies succeed? Globalisation had been an integral part of
Sunlight's business plans ever since Shukla took over as managing director in
1990 with the aim of making it the country's first international chemicals
major Since then Sunlight --- the country's third-largest chemicals maker ---
had developed export markets in as many as 40 markets, with international
revenues contributing 40 per cent of its Rs. 500 crore turnover in 1994-95. The
company also set up manufacturing bases in eight countries --- most recently in
China's Shenzhen free trade zone --- manned by a mix of local and Indian
employees.
These efforts at going global
first took shape in December 1991 when Shukla, after months of deliberations
with his senior management team, outlined Sunlight's Vision 2001 statement. It
read " "We will achieve a turnover of $ 1 billion by 2001 by tapping
global markets and developing new products." The statement was
well-received both within and outside the company. The former CEO of a
competitor had said in a newspaper report: "Shukla has nearly sensed the
pressures of operating in a new trade with a tough patents regime."
But Shukla also realised that
global expertise could not be developed overnight. Accordingly, to force the
company out of an India-centric mindset, he started a process of business
restructuring. So, the company's business earlier divided into domestic and
export divisions, was now split into five areas: Are I (India and China), Area
2 (Europe and Russia), Area 3 (Asia Pacific), Area 4 (US) and Area 5 (Africa
and South America). Initially managers were incredulous, with one senior
manager saying: "This is crazy. It lacks a sense of proportion."
The Cynicism was not misplaced.
After all, the domestic market --- which then contributed over 90 per cent of
the company's turnover --- had not only been dubbed with the Chinese market,
but had also been brought at par with the areas whose collective contributions
to the turnover was below 10 per cent Shukla's explanation, presented in an
interview to a business magazine: "Actually, the rationale is quite simple
and logical. We took a look at how the market mix would evolve a decade from
now and then created a matrix to suit that mix. Of course, we will also set up
manufacturing facilities in each of these areas to change the sales-mix
altogether."
He wasn't wrong. Two years
later, even as the first manufacturing facility in Vietnam was about to go on
stream, the overseas areas' contribution to revenues rose to 20 per cent. And
the mood of the management changed with the growing conviction that export
income would spoon surpass domestic turnover. Almost simultaneously, Shukla
told his senior managers that the process of building global markets could
materialise only if the organisation became fat flexible, and fleet-footed.
Avinash Dwivedi, am management
consultant
brought in to oversee Sunlight's restructuring exercise, told the board of
directors: "Hierachies built up over the years have blunted the company's
reflexes, and this is a disadvantage while working in the competitive global
markets."
The selection of vice-president
for the newly-constituted regions posed no immediate problem. For Sunlight had
several general managers --- from both arms of marketing and manufacturing --
whose thinking had been shaped by the company's long exposure to the export
markets. For obvicus reasons, the ability to build markets was the primary criterion
for selection. The second criterion was a broad business perspective with a
multi-functional, multi-market exposure. That was because Shukla felt it did
not make good business sense to send a battalion of functional managers to
foreign markets when two or three business managers could suffice.
But Specific markets also
needed specific competencies. That was how Sunlight chose to appoint a South
African national to head Area 5. The logic" only a local CEO could keep
track of changes in regulations and gauge the potential of the booming
chemicals market in the US. However, the effort was always focused on using
in-house talent. Shukla put it to his management team: "We should groom
managerial talent --- whether local or expatriate --- for all our overseas
operations from within the company and should rotate this expertise worldwide.
In essence, we should develop global managers within the company."
While doing the personnel
planning for each area and fixing the compensation packages for overseas
Assignment. Sunlight realised the importance of human resource (HR)
initiatives. The HR division headed by vice president Hoseph Negi, had been
hobbled for years with industrial relations problems caused by the unionisation
of the salesforce, " You have to move in step with the company's global
strategy." Shukla had told his HR managers at a training session organised
by Dwivedi who was spearheading the task of grooming global managers.
Four years down the line,
Shukla felt that Sunlight was still finding its way around the task Sure, a
system was in place. Depending on the requirements of each of the four areas,
Sunlight had started recruiting between 25 and 30 MBAs every year from the
country's leading management institutes. During the first six months, these young
managers were given cross-functional training, including classroom and
on-the-job inputs. The training was then followed by a placement dialogue to
determine the manager -area fit. If a candidate were to land, for instance, on
the Asia-Pacific desk at the head office, he would be assigned a small region,
say, Singapore, and would be responsible for the entire gamut of brand-building
for a period of one year in coordination with the regional vice-president. The
success with which he would complete his task would decide his next job: the
first full-time overseas posting. He could be appointed as the area head of,
say, Vietnam, which was equivalent to an area sales manager in the home market.
After a couple of years, he would return to base for a placement in brand
management or finance. A couple of years later, the same manager could well be
in charge of a region in a particular area. Over the past four years. Sunlight
had developed 30 odd potential global managers in the company spanning various
regions using this system.
But, considering that the
grooming programme was only three years old, Shukla felt that it would take
some time for the company's homespun managers to handle larger markets like
China on their own. The real problem in this programme was in matching the
manager to the market. Dwivedi suggested a triangular approach to get the right
fit: define the business target for a market in an area. Look at the
candidiate's past Performance in the market, And identify the key individual
characteristics for that market. Dwivedi also identified another criterion: a
good performance rating at home during the previous two years. Once selected
for an overseas posting, the candidate would be given cross-cultural training:
a course in foreign languages, interactive programmes with repatriated managers
on the nature of the assignment and, often, personality development programmes
on the nuances of country business etiquette.
Further, an overseas manager
would be appraised on two factors: the degree to which he had met his business
plan targets for the market, and the extent to which he had developed his team.
After all, he had to cachet the posting within three years to make place for
his replacement. Achievements were weighed quarterly and annually against sales
targets set at the beginning of the year by the vice-president of the region.
The appraisal would then be sent to the corporate headquarters in Bombay for
review by the senior management committee. Shukla had often heard his senior
managers talk appreciatively of the benefits of transrepatriation. "The
first batch of returnees are more patient tolerant and manure than when they
left home," said Manohar Vishwas, vice-president (finance),"and they
handle people better."
But the litmus test for the
company, Shukla felt would be in managing a foreign workforce --- across
diverse cultures --- at the manufacturing facilities in six countries outside
India. The Shenzhen unit, for instance had 220 employees, out of which only 10
were expatriate Indians. Further, the six-member top management team had only
two Indians. Of course, the mix had been dictated by the country's laws and
language considerations.
Some of the African markets had
their own peculiarities. The entire team of medical representatives, for
example, comprised fully-quilifies, professional doctors. Sharad Saxena,
vice-president, Area 5, told Shukla: "As there is heavy unemployment in
Africa doctors are attracted to field sales work for higher earnings."
There were other problems too: as both Chinese and Russian had been brought up
on a diet of socialism, they were not used to displaying initiative at the
workplace. Dwivedi had suggested that regular training was one of the ways of
transforming the workforce. So, Shukla hired a training group from Delhi's
Institute of Human Resource Management
training to spend a month at
Shenzhen. This was later incorporated as an annual exercise.
Observing that interpersonal
conflicts were common in situation where with single-country background were
working together, a new organisational structure was introduced. Here, Sunlight
positioned local managers was introduced. Here, Sunlight positioned local
managers between an Indian boss and subordinate. Similarly, some Indian
managers were positioned between a local boss and subordinate. Says Avishek
Acharya vice-president, Area 3: "There were some uncomfortable moments,
but it led to a better integration or management principles, work practices,
and ethics."
Obviously, reflected Shukla,
Dwivedi was doing a great job. As he watched the setting sun, however, he found
his thoughts turning to a more fundamental question. However immaculate his HR
planning had been, had he made a mistake by not developing his strategies
first? Was he mixing up his priorities by putting people management" ahead
of issues like marketing, technology, and global trade? Even the HR strategy he
had chosen worried Shukla. Should he have opted for more locals in each
country? If expatriate managers failed more often than they succeeded in India
wasn't the same true for other countries?
Questions:
1.
Is Sunlight on the right track in going global without trying to consolidate
its position further in the home market? 2. Can Sunlight realise its global
vision with its current mix of strategies? However fine the company's HR
planning had been, had Shukla made a mistake by not developing his strategies
first? 3. Are there any gaps in Shukla's game plan to conquer the globe? 4.
What are the learnings that you can derive from the "Sunlight" case so
far as the internationalization of business is concerned?
8)
Please read the following case study carefully and answer the questions given
at the end:
Electrolux
Electrolux is Sweden's largest
manufacturer of electrical household appliances and was one of the world's
pioneers in the marketing of vacuum cleaners. However, not all the products the
Electrolux name are controlled by the Swedish firm. Electrolux vacuum cleaner
sold and manufacturer in the United States, for example, have not been
connected with the Swedish Firm since the U.S subsidiaries were sold in the
1960s. The Swedish Firm reentered the U.S. market in 1974 by purchasing
National Union Electric, which manufacturers Eureka vacuum cleaners.
Electrolux pursued its early
international expansion largely to gain economies of scale through additional
sales. The Swedish market was simply too small to absorb fixed costs as much as
the home markets for competitive firms from larger countries. When additional
sales were not possible by exporting, Electrolux was still able to gain certain
scale economies through the establishment of foreign production. Research and
development expenditures and certain administrative costs could thus be spread
out over the additional sales made possible by foreign operations. Additionally,
Electrolux concentrated on standardized production to achieve further scale
economies and rationalization of parts.
Until the late 1960s,
Electrolux concentrated primarily on vacuum cleaners and the building of its
own facilities in order to effect expansion. Throughout the 1970s, though, the
firm expanded largely by acquiring existing firms whose product lines differed
from those of Electrolux. The compelling force was to add appliances lines to
complement those developed internally. Its recent profits ($220 million in
1983) have enabled Electrolux to go an acquisitions binge. Electrolux acquired
two Swedish firms that made home appliances and washing machines. Electrolux
management felt that it could use its existing foreign sales networks to
increase the sales of those firms in 1973, Electrolux acquired another Swedish
firm, Facit, which already had extensive foreign sales and facilities. Vacuum
cleaner producers were acquired in the United States and in France; and to gain
captive sales for vacuum cleaner. Electrolux acquired commercial cleaning
service firms in Sweden and in the United States. A French Kitchen equipment
producer, Arthur Martin, was bought, as was a Swiss home appliance firm.
Therma, and a U.S. cooking equipment manufacturer, Tappan.
Except the Facit purchase, the
above acquisitions all involved firms that produced complementary lines that
would enable the new parent to gain certain scale economies, However, not all
the products of acquired firms were related, and Electrolux sought to sell off
unrelated businesses. In 1978 for example, a Swedish firm, Husgvarna, was
bought because of its kitchen equipment lines. Electrolux was able to sell
Husqvarna's motorcycle line but could not get a good price for the chain saw
facility. Reconciled to being in the chain saw business. Electrolux then
acquired chain saw manufacturers in Canada and Norway, thus becoming one of the
world's largest chain saw producers. The above are merely the most significant.
Electrolux acquisitions: the firm made approximately fifty acquisitions in the
1970s.
In 1980, Electrolux announced a
takeover that was very different from those of the 1970s. It offered $175
million, the biggest Electrolux acquisition, for Granges Sweden's leading metal
producer and fabrication Granges was itself a multinational firm (1979 sales of
$ 1.2 billion) and made about 50 percent of its sales outside of Sweden. The
managing Directors of the two firms indicated that the major advantage of the
takeover would be the integration of Granges aluminum, copper plastic, and
other materials into Electrolux production of appliances. Many analysts felt
that the timing of Electrolux's bid was based on indications that Baijerinvest,
a large Swedish conglomerate, wished to acquire a non--ferrous matels mining
company. Other analysis felt that Elctrolux would be better off to continue
international horizontal expansion as it had in the 1970s. The analysts pointed
to large appliance makers such as AEG Telefunken of West Germany that were
likely candidates for takeover because of recent poor performance.
Questions:
- What are Electrlox's reasons for direct
investment? 2. How has Electrolux's strategy changed over time? How has
this affected its direct investment activities? 3. Which of Electrolux's foreign
investments would be horizontal and which would be vertical? What are the
advantages of each? 4. What do you see as the main advantages and possible
problems of expanding internationally primarily through acquisitions as
opposed to building one's own facilities? 5. Should Electrolux take over
Granges?
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