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International EntrepreneurshipBy, Dr. Nina Radojevich-KelleyMetropolitan State University of DenverSchool of BusinessDepartment of [email protected]
International Entrepreneurship
• Definition• “process of an entrepreneur conducting business activities across
national boundaries” (Hisrich, 2013)• Exporting, licensing, having a sales office in another country
STATS
85% of the world’s population lives in developing countries
infrastructure development is needed Over half of world’s population lives in Asia China has 20% of world’s population India twice the size of Latin America Many new market opportunities and transitioning
countries…huge opportunities exist Russia, Serbia, China, Malaysia, Peru, Vietnam, Iraq,
countries in Africa
International Entrepreneurship
• Many potential markets and prospective countries available• Foreign market selection is critical issue• Should you…• enter the top country,• select the largest potential market or one that is easier to
navigate? • Should you go into a developed market? Or developing market?
• Decision….• Based on past sales, competitive positioning and assessment of
EACH foreign market alternative• Collect data on a regional (EU) and country basis (Southeastern
China)
BEFORE expanding abroad: Entrepreneurs should…..• Assess key indicators • Collect and analyze data (primary and secondary)• Look at stats for 3 year period of time (or more) to see trends
• Secondary Data• NAICS codes- look for equivalent industry reports• Doing Business Abroad reports• GEM reports• STAT-country (STAT-USA)• CIA World fact book• Index on Economic Freedom• Humanitarian Response Index• GLOBUS• National Trade Database
• Look at country rankings & cultural perceptions
Motivations for GOING International? Increase profits
95% of world’s population lives outside of USA =$
Competitive pressures Can’t keep up with low prices…need to manufacture abroad
To avoid increased government regulations Car manufacturing, chemicals & toxins
Unique product/service Similar markets elsewhere
Aging population, obesity, autism
Excess production capacity Have a ton of extra stuff and local market doesn’t want it
Declining home country sales In latter part of life-cycle If your technology is obsolete in your country….take it to another country which might see it at revolutionary…
new sales opportunities
Take advantage of lower costs Lower costs in labor, raw materials, manufacturing overhead Nike, Reebok, Disney
Technological advantage
Tax benefits Have advantage of having sales office and distribution
Things to Consider When Selecting a Country?• Language• Economy and type of economic system• Political and Legal environment• Labeling requirements, advertising claims, ingredients, packaging, types of legal
ownership, pricing decisions (if Value-Added-Tax) • Culture• How open is the culture to entrepreneurship?• Perceptions of local entrepreneurs• How similar/different the culture is from your own
• Technological Environment• Local competitors• Opportunity perception
• Entrepreneurs motivation for expanding international• Proximity to customers (physical and psychological closeness)• Trade Agreements (regional and free trade)• How long does it take to actually form/create a business
Best Place for Entrepreneurs to Research Foreign Markets?• World Bank• Doing Business Abroad Report• Ease of doing business
• Global Entrepreneur Monitor (GEM)
Doing Business Abroad• World Bank• Ranked 185 economies on Ease of Doing Business in 2013• Environment is more or less conducive to starting and operating a
business in a given country
• “TOP” ranked countries have less RED TAPE…• More attractive to entrepreneurs…….but is this the complete picture?
• Concerns with JUST using these reports? • Does not take into account the culture, perception among entrepreneurship
among citizens, perceived opportunities for starting ventures
Doing Business Abroad: Averages a country’s percentile rankings on 10 topics
• Starting a business• # payments, time in days, costs% income per capita, paid-in min. capital (% per capita income)
• Dealing with construction permits• # procedures and # days to obtain permits to build warehouse, cost (% per capita)
• Getting electricity• # procedures and # days to obtain permanent electricity, cost (% per capita)
• Registering property• # procedures and # days required to register property, cost (% per capita)
• Getting credit• degree to which collateral and bankruptcy laws protect the rights of borrowers and lenders and facilitate
lending, borrowing history, rules & practices• Protecting investors
• Liability, stakeholder ability to sue directors/officers, transparency of transactions, • Paying taxes
• # payments per year, time it takes to file, % of tax paid on profits, upkeep labor, % tax paid for mandatory contributions (Federal corp income tax, State prop. tax, Sales, federal unemployment tax, other (truck-lease tax, fuel tax)
• Trading across borders• total # documents required per shipment to export/import goods, costs associated with exports/imports
(including documents, admin fees for custom clearance, broker fees)• Enforcing contracts
• # of days to resolve dispute, # procedures to enforce contract, and costs of attorney fees and court fees• Resolving Insolvency
• Average time to close a business, average cost of bankruptcy proceedings, recovery rate cents-to-$
Top 10 Countries for Entrepreneurshiphttp://doingbusiness.org/rankings
EconomyEase of Doing
Business Rank
Starting a Business
Dealing with
ConstructPermits
Getting Electricity
Register Property
Getting Credit
Protecting Investors
Paying Taxes
Trading Across
BordersEnforcing Contracts
Resolving Insolvency
Singapore 1 4 2 5 36 12 2 5 1 12 2Hong Kong, China 2 6 1 4 60 4 3 4 2 10 17
New Zealand 3 1 6 32 2 4 1 21 25 17 13
United States 4 13 17 19 25 4 6 69 22 6 16
Denmark 5 33 8 14 6 23 32 13 4 34 10
Norway 6 43 23 14 7 70 25 19 21 4 3
United Kingdom 7 19 20 62 73 1 10 16 14 21 8
Korea, Rep. 8 24 26 3 75 12 49 30 3 2 14
Georgia 9 7 3 50 1 4 19 33 38 30 81
Australia 10 2 11 36 37 4 70 48 44 15 18
Finland 11 49 34 21 24 40 70 23 6 9 5
Top 10 Countries for Entrepreneurshiphttp://doingbusiness.org/rankings
EconomyEase of Doing
Business Rank
Starting a Business
Dealing with
Construct Permits
Getting Electricity
Register Property
Paying Taxes
Trading Across
BordersEnforcing Contracts
Resolving Insolvency
Singapore 1 4 2 5 36 5 1 12 2
Per Capita$ 42,930
3 days3 proced.6% Cost
per capita
26 days11 proced
16.7% cost
36 days4 proced28% cost
21 days5 proced
2.9% cost
5 pymtsYR82 hrs/yr6% profit
tax27.6%
total Tax 4 docuExprt $456
150 days21 proced
.8 yearsCost 1%
estateHong Kong, China 2 6 1 4 60 4 2 10 17
Per Capita$ 35,160
3 days3 proced
1.9% Cost per capita
67 days6 proced
16.3% cost
41 days4 proced
1.6% cost
36 days5 proced
4% cost
3 pymtsYR78 hrs/yr
17% profit tax
23.% total Tax
6 docuExprt $923
360 days27 proced
1.1 yearsCost 9%
estate
New Zealand 3 1 6 32 2 21 25 17 13
Per Capita$ 36,648
1 days1 proced.4% Cost
per capita
89 days6 proced
29.8% cost
50 days5 proced
76.1% cost
2 days2 proced.1% cost
8 pymtsYR152 hrs/yr
28.8% profit tax
33.5.% total Tax
5 docuExprt $870
216 days30 proced
1.3 yearsCost 4%
estate
Top 10 Countries for Entrepreneurshiphttp://doingbusiness.org/rankings
EconomyEase of Doing
Business Rank
Starting a Business
Dealing with
Construct Permits
Getting Electricity
Register Property
Paying Taxes
Trading Across
BordersEnforcing Contracts
Resolving Insolvency
United States 4 13 17 19 25 69 22 6 16
Per capita $48, 850
6 days6 proced
1.4% Cost per capita
27 days15 proced
14.4% cost
68 days4 proced
16.1% cost
12 days4 proced
3.5% cost
11 pmtsYR175 hrs/yr
27.6% profit tax
46.7% total Tax
4 docuExprt
$1090370 days
32 proced
1.5yearsCost 7%
estateDenmark 5 33 8 14 6 13 4 34 10
Per Capita$ 60,390
6 days4 proced.2% Cost
per capitaPLUS 24.2%
capital saved
68 days8 proced
57.1% cost
38 days4 proced
119.6% cost
10 days3 proced.6% cost
10 pymtsYR
130 hrs/yr20% profit
tax27.% total
Tax
4 docuExprt
$1744410 days
35 proced
1 yearsCost 4%
estate
United Kingdom 7 19 20 62 73 16 14 21 8
Per Capita$ 37,780
13 days6 proced.7% Cost
per capita
99 days9 proced
62.4% cost
105 days5 proced
108% cost
29 days6 proced
4.7% cost
8 pymtsYR110 hrs/yr22% profit
tax35.5.%
total Tax4docu
Exprt $950399 days
28 proced
1 yearsCost 6%
estate
Top countries• Can’t just take top 10 countries and go forward• Doing Business Abroad does not tell entire story• Must look at culture (fear of failure), perception among entrepreneurship
among citizens, perceived opportunities for starting ventures• Funding opportunities (VC, Angel investors)• Opportunity for women in entrepreneurship• GDP per capita (strength of the economy)• Free Trade Agreements• Immigration laws• Workforce-strength, skills, age• Size of market• Cultural support
• Some of the largest countries are the best countries for entrepreneurs, but some of the smaller economies made the list (New Zealand, Chile)
• Some of the smallest HAVE the great opportunities WITH LESS competition
Remember• Just because it is easy to start a business in a country does not
mean that small businesses are being started• Example: Japan, France• Always rank in top 20% of countries to start a business in• Yet have low rates of entrepreneurship
• Fear of failure• Not supported by culture
GEM Report 2012http://www.gemconsortium.org
Looks to understand societal attitudes, participant levels, characteristics of entrepreneurs, etc.Entrepreneurship is a good career choice• In the EU only 50% of respondents agreed that
entrepreneurship was a good career choice• In Latin America/Caribbean, the Middle East/North Africa
(MENA) and Sub-Saharan Africa regions, over 75% of respondents considered entrepreneurship to be a good career choice
• Asia Pacific/South Asia region estimated 30% of the population saw opportunities for entrepreneurship• Only 17% intended to actually start a business in next 3 yrs
Fear of Failurehttp://www.gemconsortium.org
• Sub-Saharan Africa exhibited the lowest levels of fear of failure. • Only 24% of all respondents indicated that fear of failure would
prevent them from starting a business. • Latin American and Caribbean economies (28%) had fear of
failure which would prevent them from starting a venture• Fear of failure generally increases as one moves from early-
stage to advanced development levels • Greece (61%) and Italy (58%) showed the highest fear of
failure levels
Perceived Opportunitieshttp://www.gemconsortium.org
• factor-driven economies (those relying on agriculture or extraction businesses with a heavy reliance on (unskilled) labor and natural resources) had highest perceptions of opportunities for entrepreneurship and intention to start business• Middle East & North Africa
• Algeria, Egypt, Iran, Palestine• Sub-Saharan Africa
• Angola, Botswana, Ethiopia, Ghana, Malawi, Nigeria, Uganda, Zambia • Asia Pacific & South Asia (Pakistan)• 70% of sub-Saharan African economies had high perceptions
about the presence of good opportunities AND 76% believed they have the skills and knowledge to start a business• Sub-Saharan Africa reports high levels of entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurship Intentionhttp://www.gemconsortium.org
• The intention to start a venture in next 3 years• Factor-driven economies (48%)
• Middle-East and North African countries, Sub-Saharan Africa• Iran, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, Nigeria
• Efficiency driven economies (26%)• European Union (Hungary, Romania, Poland, Lithuania), Non-
European union (Croatia, Serbia, Russia, Turkey), Asia Pacific & South Asia (China, Thailand, Malaysia), Latin America & Caribbean (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Costa Rica, Peru, Panama)
• Innovation-driven economies (11%)• North Africa & Middle East (Israel), South Asia & Asia Pacific (Japan,
Singapore, Taiwan), European Union (Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, France, Ireland, Greece, Spain, UK, Sweden, Slovakia, Portugal), non-European Union (Norway, Switzerland), United States
Economyhttp://www.gemconsortium.org
Perceived Opportunity
Perceived Capability
Fear of Failure
EntrepreneurIntention
Good Career
Brazil 52% 54% 31% 36% 86%
Nigeria 82 88 21 44 82
China 32 38 36 20 72
Japan 6 9 53 2 30
Singapore 23 27 42 16 50
Rep. of Kor 13 27 43 13 59
UK 33 47 36 10 50
New Zealand
47 62 24 13 61
Australia 48 47 43 12 54
Denmark 44 31 39 7 NA
Greece 13 50 61 10 64
Croatia 17 44 36 19 64
Russia 20 24 47 2 60
USA 43 56 32 13 92
Economyhttp://www.gemconsortium.org
Total Entrepreneur Rate (18-64 yrs)
Necessity Driven
Opportunity Driven
Brazil 15 30 59
Nigeria 35 35 53
China 13 37 39
Japan 4 21 66
Singapore 12 15 54
Rep. of Kor 7 35 46
UK 9 18 43
New Zealand
17 7 79
Australia 10.5 15 73
Denmark 5 8 71
Greece 7 30 32
Croatia 8 34 36
Russia 4 36 31
USA 13 21 59
Conclusion: Top Countries• New Zealand• Australia• Denmark• Republic of Korea• Canada• Singapore• Chile• UK• South Korea
• Look at Doing Business Abroad• Ease of starting business
• Culture (fear of failure), perception among entrepreneurship among citizens, perceived opportunities for starting ventures (GEM)
• Funding opportunities (VC, Angel investors)
• Opportunity for women in entrepreneurship
• GDP per capita (strength of the economy)
• Free Trade Agreements• Immigration laws• Workforce-strength, skills, age• Size of market• Cultural support
Top Countries• New Zealand• Fast to start (1 day, 1 procedure, costs $ 127), strong GDP ($ 162 Bill),
maintained high percentage of companies started annually, strong opportunity driven, strong perceptions, good angel/VC. Stable business climate, good personal freedom, lacks red tape and corruption, corporate tax (28%), good FDI
• Australia• Fast to start (2 days, 2 procedures), strong GDP ($ 1.1 Trill), maintained high
percentage of companies started annually, strong opportunity driven, strong perceptions, good angel/VC, Negatives—high tax rates (47.7%), but 50% believe there is excellent opportunity, Australian Free trade Agreement, strong personal freedom and strong business climate
• Canada• Fast to start (5 days, 1 procedure, costs $ 195), strong GDP ($ 1.6 Trill),
maintained high percentage of companies started annually, strong opportunity driven, strong perceptions, good angel/VC, low tax rates (28.8% on profits versus USA 46.7%), NAFTA, not many Canadians starting businesses. But lacks innovation, but has strong investor protection
Top Countries• Denmark• GDP is one of highest in world ($59, 684 versus USA $ 48,442)(World
Bank, 2012), business-friendly climate, easy to start and run businesses and strong opportunity perceptions, good angel/VC opportunities
• Chile• More VC/angel funding available, growing economy, is one of least
restrictive systems in South America for starting a business, good perception for opportunity
• Start-up Chile- programs created by government to promote innovation..provides $40,000 equity (seed-capital) and a 1 year temporary visitor visa. Tax rate is 25% (lowest of all OECD nations)
• Singapore• Good perceptions and opportunities, economy depends on exports,
trade surplus (24% of GDP), BUT scores low on personal freedom, easy to start and run business
Top Countries• UK• Trying to lure entrepreneurs with new type of visa, hard to get a
bank loan (only 64% success rate), can settle into UK with in 2 years…depending on how much money you inject into economy, good VC/Angel opportunities, easy to start business, good business climate . Costs $ 257 to start business, takes 13 days, 6 procedures
• South Korea• Fast to start (7day, 5 procedures, $36 dollars), strong GDP ($ 1
Trill), cheap and easy to start, fear of failure is biggest concern (45%), 40% of Koreans work for companies with 10-49 employees
TOP Countries• USA???• Fell a little…but still top 10• Still very open to FDI, good opportunities for women, and to
entrepreneurs in general, great VC/Angel investor potential, minimal red tape, but……tax rates dampen the business interests (highest statutory tax rate in the world-46% which is the published rate—effective rate is lower), strong business climate, little corruption, good protection on IP, complexity of the tax code is troublesome
• Good personal freedom and monetary freedom
Conclusion: Worst CountriesPhilippines• lowest ranked Asian country and most difficult places to do business in. Low
FDI, slow economic growth, unstable legal system, violence and bureaucracy
Venezuela• Bottom when it comes to ease of paying taxes, getting credit, investor
protection laws, and cross-border trading, nationalization of the economy makes it hard for business., hard to withdraw money from your bank, inflation (26%)
Nigeria• Africa’s largest oil producer, but huge political unrest, growing ethnic
tensions, religious tensions make it hard to do business, high corruption, ranks among the lowest in the world for getting electricity (3months) and registering property.Violence, poverty, pollution, political instability
Worst CountriesRussia• Is one of the world’s fastest growing economies, but also one of most
difficult places to do business in. One of toughest places in the to get an electricity connection, (9.5 months). Major power outages and lack of investment in power sector. Trade is slow..takes 3x longer compared to other OECD nations
Argentina• It takes 1 year to get a construction permit, compared to 7 months for Latin
American countries. Starting a business takes 26 days. They scared off FDI by defaulting on debt in 2002
Indonesia• One of most difficult to start a business. Need 1.5 months to launch a business in
Indonesia, hard to get electricity. 15 million households have no access to electricity. Want FDI to provide 2/3 of $ 150 billion needed for infrastructure development in the next five years
Step to Expanding Internationally Research, research and research (see next slide) Choose an entrepreneur-friendly environment.
Look at the countries that are the most and least friendly to small business. Turn to Uncle Sam.
Your local U.S. Export Assistance Center (USAEC) can help you with tasks such as finding pre-screened partners, agents and distributors; conducting background
checks and market research; and tracking down relevant trade events in 85 countries. Investigate suppliers thoroughly.
Use sourcing sites such as Alibaba.com to search for suppliers by country and product (or service).
Avoid placing orders before you have traveled to meet potential new suppliers and tour their factories.
Do references checks BEFORE you sign a deal. Hit the trade show circuit.
Participants of shows are well-established suppliers of goods /services or logistics experts, such as freight-forwarders and customs brokers
For leads on reputable trade shows, consult your industry association U.S. Department of Commerce for non-food related businesses U.S. Foreign Agricultural Service, which have offices focused on global trade events.
Places to look for Data?
• Other places to research• STAT-country (STAT-USA)• CIA World fact book• Index on Economic Freedom• Humanitarian Response Index• GLOBUS• National Trade Database• Doing Business Abroad• GEM