首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
For as long as multinational companies have existed—and some historians trace them back to banking under the Knights Templar in
For as long as multinational companies have existed—and some historians trace them back to banking under the Knights Templar in
admin
2017-03-15
23
问题
For as long as multinational companies have existed—and some historians trace them back to banking under the Knights Templar in 1135—they have been derided by their critics as rapacious rich-world beasts. If there was ever any truth to that accusation, it is fast disappearing. While globalisation has opened new markets to rich-world companies, it has also given birth to a pack of fast-moving, sharp-toothed new multinationals that is emerging from the poor world.
Indian and Chinese firms are now starting to give their rich-world rivals a run for their money. So far this year, Indian firms, led by Hindalco and Tata Steel, have bought some 34 foreign companies for a combined $10.7 billion. Indian IT-services companies such as Infosys, Tata Consultancy Services and Wipro are putting the fear of God into the old guard, including Accenture and even mighty IBM. Big Blue sold its personal-computer business to a Chinese multinational, Lenovo, which is now starting to get its act together. PetroChina has become a force in Africa, including, controversially, Sudan. Brazilian and Russian multinationals are also starting to make their mark. The Russians have outdone the Indians this year, splashing $11.4 billion abroad, and are now in the running to buy Alitalia, Italy’s state airline.
These are very early days, of course. India’s Ranbaxy is still minute compared with a branded-drugs maker like Pfizer; China’s Haier, a maker of white goods, is a minnow next to Whirlpool’s whale. But the new multinationals are bent on the course taken by their counterparts in Japan in the 1980s and South Korea in the 1990s. Just as Toyota and Samsung eventually obliged western multinationals to rethink how to make cars and consumer electronics, so today’s young thrusters threaten the veterans wherever they are complacent.
The newcomers have some big advantages over the old firms. They are unencumbered by the accumulated legacies of their rivals. Infosys rightly sees itself as more agile than IBM, because when it makes a decision it does not have to weigh the opinions of thousands of highly paid careerists in Armonk, New York. That, in turn, can make a difference in the scramble for talent. Western multinationals often find that the best local people leave for a local rival as soon as they have been trained, because the prospects of rising to the top can seem better at the local firm.
But the newcomers’ advantages are not overwhelming. Take the difference in company ethics, for instance, which worries plenty of rich-world managers.
They fear that they will engage in a race to the botto—with rivals unencumbered by the fine feelings of shareholders and domestic customers, and so are bound to lose. Yet the evidence is that companies harmonise up, not down. In developing countries (never mind what the NGOs say) multinationals tend to spread better working practices and environmental conditions; but when emerging-country multinationals operate in rich countries they tend to adopt local mores. So as those companies globalise, the differences are likely to narrow.
Nor is cost as big an advantage to emerging-country multinationals as it might seem. They compete against the old guard on value for money, which depends on both price and quality. A firm like Tata Steel, from low-cost India, would never have bought expensive, Anglo-Dutch Corus were it not for its expertise in making fancy steel.
This points to an enduring source of advantage for the wealthy companies under attack. A world that is not governed by cost alone suits them, because they already possess a formidable array of skills, such as managing relations with customers, polishing brands, building up know-how and fostering innovation.
The question is how to make these count. Sam Palmisano, IBM’s boss, foresees nothing less than the redesign of the multinational company. In his scheme, multinationals began when 19th-century firms set up sales offices abroad for goods shipped from factories at home. Firms later created smaller "Mini Me" versions of the parent company across the world. Now Mr. Palmisano wants to piece together worldwide operations, putting different activities wherever they are done best, paying no heed to arbitrary geographical boundaries. That is why, for example, IBM now has over 50,000 employees in India and ambitious plans for further expansion there. Even as India has become the company’s second-biggest operation outside America, it has moved the head of procurement from New York to Shenzhen in China.
As Mr. Palmisano readily concedes, this will be the work of at least a generation. Furthermore, rich-country multinationals may struggle to shed nationalistic cultures. IBM is even now trying to wash the starch out of its white-shirted management style. But today, General Electric alone seems able to train enough of its recruits to think as GE people first and Indians, Chinese or Americans second. Lenovo’s decision to appoint an American, William Amelio, as its Singapore-based chief executive, under a Chinese chairman, is a hint that some newcomers already understand the way things are going.IBM’s approach is possible only because globalisation is flourishing. Many of the barriers that stopped cross-border commerce have fallen. And yet, Mr. Palmisano’s idea also depends on the fact that the terrain remains decidedly bumpy. Increasingly, success for a multinational will depend on correctly spotting which places best suit which of the firm’s activities. Make the wrong bets and the world’s bumps will work against you. And now that judgment, rather than tariff barriers, determines location, picking the right place to invest becomes both harder and more important.
Nobody said that coping with a new brood of competitors was going to be easy. Some of today’s established multinational companies will not be up to the task. But others will emerge from the encounter stronger than ever. And consumers, wherever they are, will gain from the contest.
According to the passage, which of the following statement is true?
选项
A、Multinational companies are rapacious rich-world beasts.
B、The development of new multinational companies can be attributed to globalization.
C、Although new multinational companies grows fast, there is nothing to worry because they still have a long way to go.
D、Japan and Korea are also threats to new multinational companies.
答案
B
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.kaotiyun.com/show/iySO777K
本试题收录于:
NAETI高级口译笔试题库外语翻译证书(NAETI)分类
0
NAETI高级口译笔试
外语翻译证书(NAETI)
相关试题推荐
WhyhaslifeflourishedonEarth?Thisquestionhasatwo-part,answer.First,Earthhasbeenacradleforlifebecauseofitsp
WhyhaslifeflourishedonEarth?Thisquestionhasatwo-part,answer.First,Earthhasbeenacradleforlifebecauseofitsp
AlthoughtherearemanyskillfulBraillereaders,thousandsofotherblindpeoplefinditdifficulttolearnthatsystemTheyar
TheasphaltatLaBreaseepstothesurface,especiallyinthesummer,andformsshallowpuddlesthatwouldoftenhavebeenconc
Asthefederalgovernmentshutdownapproachesthetwo-weekmark,it’sbecomepainfullyapparentthatthepubliccannolongerru
下面你将听到一段题为“说聪明”的论述。聪明的人,智力发达、记忆和理解能力也强。聪明是好事,是财富,应好好利用,用于进步;用于获取知识,用于为祖国为人民做好事,为大家也为自己好。应该承认,人和人不一样,有的人就是聪明。周恩来就是一个聪明的人,早在年
ChinesepeoplehaveshownevidentinterestinAfricanproducts.
A、France.B、Switzerland.C、England.D、Spain.B
A、InJamestown.B、InWashington.C、InPlymouth.D、InHolland.C
A、France.B、Italy.C、Switzerland.D、Spain.A
随机试题
下面哪一项是瓷全冠修复的适应证
下列情况可引起语音震颤增强的是()。
依照法律被剥夺政治权利的人可以行使的权利和自由是:()。
在下列项目组织形式中,全职人员在项目团队中所占比例几乎没有的是()。
根据《注册造价工程师管理办法》,注册造价工程师注册有效期满需继续执业的,应在注册有效期满()日前,按照规定的程序申请延续注册。
(2014年)下列各项因素中,不会对投资项目内含报酬率指标计算结果产生影响的是()。
甲某遭到乙某等3人的无端殴打,并被乙某用刮刀刺伤。甲某急忙夺路跑走,此时,乙某等人高呼:“抓小偷!”。路人丙某不明真相,上前抓住甲某。甲某一时难以挣脱,不得已刺伤丙某,得以脱身。事后查明,甲某被乙某刺成重伤,甲某给丙某造成轻伤害。甲某的行为属于刑法上的(
根据我国《宪法》的规定,宣布进入紧急状态,宣布战争状态的是()。
既是联邦德国战后教育巩固和发展时期的总纲,也是教育改革时期的起点,被认为是德国教育从传统学校恢复时期向教育改革时期过渡的转折点的法案是
A、30.B、42.C、62.D、80.B短文首句就提到David将在玻璃盒中待上6周,后文详细介绍时又一次提及sixweeks,故B为答案。
最新回复
(
0
)