Basic Marketing: A Global Managerial Approach

(Nandana) #1

Perreault−McCarthy: Basic
Marketing: A
Global−Managerial
Approach, 14/e



  1. Evaluating Opportunities
    in the Changing Marketing
    Environment


Text © The McGraw−Hill
Companies, 2002

Evaluating Opportunities in the Changing Marketing Environment 109

country in which they operate but also with all of the different laws in every coun-
try. This would certainly hinder the advantages that should come from more
European unification.^19

The international competition fostered by the moves to unify Europe provided
impetus for the U.S., Mexico, and Canada to develop more cooperative trade agree-
ments. The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)lays out a plan to reshape
the rules of trade among the U.S., Canada, and Mexico. NAFTA basically enlarges
the free-trade pact that had already knocked down most barriers to U.S.–Canada
trade, and over a 15-year period it will eliminate most such barriers with Mexico. It
also establishes a forum for resolving future trade disputes.
NAFTA is a long-term proposition, and its overall economic impact is yet to be
seen. However, tariffs that have already dropped are having a significant impact on
specific businesses. For example, Raychem Corp., a small producer of telecommuni-
cations equipment, no longer faces a 25 percent tariff on exports to Mexico. That is
leveling its competitive playing field and creating new opportunities. More generally,
NAFTA is creating a free-trade region that encompasses over 400 million people and
three economies that produce over $9 trillion worth of goods and services annually.
Thus, the changes that result from NAFTA may ultimately be as significant as those
in Europe. Talks are underway to explore the concept of expanding NAFTA to cre-
ate a free-trade zone for 34 countries across North, South, and Central America.
Of course, removal of some economic and political barriers—whether across all
of the Americas or Europe—will not eliminate the need to adjust strategies to reach
submarkets of consumers. Centuries of political and cultural differences will not dis-
appear overnight. Some may never disappear.^20
Some dramatic changes in the political environment—like the fall of commu-
nism in Eastern Europe—happen fast and are hard to predict. Yet many important
political changes—both within and across nations—evolve more gradually. The
development of consumerism is a good example.

Consumerismis a social movement that seeks to increase the rights and powers
of consumers. In the last 40 years, consumerism has emerged as a major political
force. Although the consumer movement has spread to many different countries, it
was born in America.

NAFTA is building trade
cooperation

Adero wants marketers to keep
in mind that a website that can
attract prospects from all over
the world won’t be successful in
turning them into customers if it
ignores nationalism and cultural
differences.

Consumerism is here—
and basic
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