The Employment Effects Of FDIs

Post by J_hardcastle89 in Career

     

The mere existence of resources in a country is no guarantee they will contribute to output. Multinational enterprises (MNEs) may enable idle resources to be used. Oil production for instance, requires not only the presence of underground deposits but also the knowledge of how to find them and the capital equipment to bring the oil to the surface. Production is useless without markets and transportation facilities, which an international investor may be able to supply. Access to foreign markets, particularly the investor’s home market, may be particularly important to developing countries that lack the knowledge and resources necessary to sell there. Additionally, another less tangible aspect of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is greater resource utilization. Through exposure to new consumer products, the local labor force may develop new wants, which could encourage them to work longer and harder to acquire the additional goods and services.

MNEs’ upgrading of resources may be brought about through educating local personnel to utilize equipment, technology, and modern production methods. Even such seemingly minor programs as those promoting on-the-job safety may result in a reduction of lost worker time and machine downtime. The transference of work skills increases efficiency, thereby freeing time for other activities. Further, additional competition may force existing companies to become more efficient.

Some trade unions have claimed that there are examples of MNEs making investments, which domestic companies otherwise would have undertaken. The result may be the displacement of local entrepreneurs and entrepreneurial drive or the bidding up of prices without additional output. Such trade unions argue, for example, that by their ability to raise funds in various countries, MNEs can reduce their capital cost relative to that of local companies and apply the savings either to attract the best personnel or to entice customers from competitors through greater promotional efforts. However, evidence for these arguments is inconclusive. MNEs frequently do pay higher salaries and spend more on promotion than local companies do, but it is uncertain whether these differences result from external advantages or represent required added costs of attracting workers and customers when entering new markets. Added compensation and promotion costs may negate any external cuts advantages obtained from access to cheaper foreign capital. Additionally, in many instances, the local competition also has access to that cheaper capital.

Trade unions also contend that FDI destroys local entrepreneurial drive, which has an important effect on development. Since the expectation of success is necessary for the inauguration of entrepreneurial activity, the collapse of small cottage industries in the face of MNEs consolidation efforts may make the local population feel incapable of competing. However, the presence of MNEs sometimes may increase the number of local companies in host-countries markets since MNEs serve as a role model that local talent can emulate. Further, an MNE often buy many services, goods, and supplies locally and thus may stimulate local entrepreneurship. For example, automobile producers typically add less than half the value of an automobile at the factory, buying the remaining parts, subassemblies, and modules from suppliers. In fact, true entrepreneurs will find areas in which to compete; consequently, in any country there are success stories that can be emulated.

Another argument trade-unions use is that investors have access to high technology abroad that may use later in their home-countries. This access may prevent original developers from maintaining proprietary advantages. It may also prevent production from remaining in the country where the innovation is originated as the product moves through its life cycle. Taking advantage of the host-country’s progress may result for MNEs in developing competitive capabilities in their home-countries that are based in foreign scientific and technical investments.

Moreover, trade unions observe that MNEs absorb local capital, either by borrowing locally or by receiving investment incentives. This raises the local cost of funds and/or makes insufficient funds available to local companies. Subsidiaries have borrowed heavily in local markets and have exploited investment incentives. For example, more than 53 percent of the value of assets owned abroad by U.S. companies is financed by foreign debt. The link to the ability of local companies to finance expansion is unclear. For MNEs to have a noticeable effect on capital availability in a country, the amount of funds diverted to those investors would have to be larger in relation to the size of the capital market than is probably the case. Further, few MNEs acquire all resources locally; the additional resources brought in usually should yield a gain for the economy.

Host-countries at times have not only prohibited the entry of MNEs believed to inhibit local companies, but also restricted local borrowing by MNEs and provided incentives for them to locate in depressed areas in which resources are idle rather than scarce.

Concluding, of particular concern to many countries is the foreign purchase of local companies. The employment effects continue to be debated because of assumptions about what would have happened had the acquisition not taken place, particularly when it involves a company that is not doing well and is subsequently downsized. It is thus impossible to say for certain whether there was more or less employment because of the acquisition. For these reasons, the employment effects of FDIs have been evaluated as both negative and positive.

Jonathon Hardcastle writes articles on many topics including Investing, Business, and Employment

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Internet Presence — How To Make Your Networking Profile Work For You

Post by Rbates-articles in Career

     

Building an Internet presence is something many people have invested a lot of time into - and many are absolutely blowing a great opportunity to further their professional objectives. I’m constantly amazed at the number of individuals unfortunately unaware of how simple changes to their networking profiles can turn their networking profiles into powerful tools that actually impact their business objectives.

Granted not everyone joins networking platforms to further their professional objectives, and that is obviously fine. I’ve personally developed a number of great relationships that have nothing to do with business objectives through on-line networking platforms.

For those that do care about how on-line networking platforms can further their professional objectives, an Internet presence can be developed in a very short amount of time simply through the profile you create on a networking platform such as Ecademy, LinkedIn, et al. Unfortunately the way many people construct their networking profile, it does nothing for them from a business exposure perspective.

Heidi Heyns has been kind enough to let me use her as an example. Heidi and I are connected on LinkedIn and Ecademy. She is a wonderful caring vibrant personality who absolutely excels at her profession of - voice-over actor. When I first saw Heidi was on Ecademy, I Googled her name, and sure enough, this was what I found:

Heidi Heyns - Ecademy Profile
I am So completely Filled with Light at all the LOVE I have experienced in this place called ecademy… If you are new, PLEASE say hello and if you ask, …

I recommended to Heidi if she cared about actually generating business leads as a result of belonging to Ecademy, as opposed simply enjoy the social aspects of Ecademy, she should make some simple changes to her profile. I explained that once Google grabbed the new more descriptive text from her Ecademy profile it would be more supportive of her business objectives.

She made the recommended changes such that her Ecademy profile hit in Google now looks like this:

Heidi Heyns - Ecademy Profile
Commercial voice-over actor, message impact expert and consultant. I can help you not just reach, but also more effectively appeal to your target audience.

Shortly after implementing these changes, Heidi sent me a note that said:

“OH wow! …Ron! Have you seen my new revised profile??? I am getting completely different kinds of emails… BUSINESS emails!”

On a site like Ecademy, you can actually drive what the descriptive text says in Google given Ecademy basically supplies the first 150 characters of what you type in the “Profile Text:” box when creating your profile. The search engines like Google use this as the descriptive text below the hit link. This is extremely powerful.

Unfortunately, you can’t do this on all networking platforms. Some networking platforms only provide the search engines with generic descriptive text you can’t control. The search engines then use this generic text below the hit link such as LinkedIn et al.

LinkedIn: Heidi Heyns
Heidi Heyns’s professional profile on LinkedIn. LinkedIn is a networking tool that helps users like Heidi Heyns, …

By simply making a small adjustment to your networking profile content on sites such as Ecademy where you can drive the descriptive hit text, you create a useful hit in Google that actually has a chance of adding to your Internet presence in a way that is supportive of your business objectives.

Happy Networking.

Ron Bates is an expert in mission critical retained executive search. As recognized expert in building an on-line personal Internet presence, Ron has been referred to as “the most connected man on Earth” with +27,000 direct contacts on on-line professional networking platforms. Find Ron’s blog “Internet Presence - Do you exist?” at http://www.search-advantage.com

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Booming Career As A Real Estate Agent

Post by Tjacowski in Career

     

Real estate is a convenient marriage of two different words from French and English with real coming from ‘Royale’ and ‘estate’ being an English word, representing immovable property. The term royale represented the monarchies in royal estates of the earlier eras. It has now transformed into real over time with monarchies coming down and economies presenting opportunities for everyone to own any piece of property under the sun. This presented two new lines of business: Real Estate Broking and Real Estate Agency.

Just The Facts, Ma’am

According to one estimate by “The Economist”, real estate assets in the United States equal a whopping $62 trillion, which is a big 54% of their entire asset value. It may be hard to believe that the portion of residential properties amounts to $48 trillion out of that mind- blowing figure. This stands as a testimony to the demand and supply of real estate assets and thus why real estate is such a high-growth field.

A total of $61 billion was paid in commission to real estate brokers in 2004 alone. And a good part of this huge money goes to the licensed agents serving them.

Real Estate Business - No One Promised You A Rose Garden

If you are considering a career in real estate as an agent, it is wise to know the pitfalls before beginning. No agent these days can make it big by working only on the weekends for a couple of hours. Since an agent is the face of a broker, and is required to split the revenues with the broker, he needs to work full time (and then some) in order to earn a good income. Getting sucked into the profession by looking at the successful and most visible agents alone would be a mistake.

How Does One Become A Real Estate Agent

The criteria set by the law and respective state governments vary with respect to licensing, but here are the general requirements:

- You must be at least 18 years old and a high school graduate
- Must take a qualifying course of 30 hours
- After passing, you must work as real estate sales person under a broker for one year in to be eligible to apply for a real estate agent’s license

If you are knowledgeable about real estate regulations and laws by having worked for a minimum of 2 years for your employer, you can directly apply for the license once you pass the examination required by the Secretary of State.

Additional knowledge and experience such as overall economics and economic indicators, mathematics and property law is also helpful. But what decides the success of your career is the good will you earn with clients. You need to be gregarious, persistent and knowledgeable.

How much can you expect to earn? This is subjective and there are major and minor aspects that affect this. However, as a successful real estate agent you have a potential to earn anywhere from $54,000 to $75,000. There are agents who are earning more than $100,000 a year, but these have several years of experience under their belts.

The great thing about it is that your earning potential is limited only by your own abilities and the amount of work that you put in. So work hard for a few years and you can quickly find yourself among the top agents in your state!

Tony Jacowski is a quality analyst for The MBA Journal. Aveta
Solution’s Six Sigma Online offers online href="http://www.sixsigmaonline.org">six sigma training and certification
classes for lean six sigma, black belts, green belts, and yellow belts.

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