1 - 5
6 - 10
11 - 15
16 - 20
20 - 25
100

authentic leaders

Leaders who are passionate about the company, live out corporate values daily in their behavior in the workplace, and form long-term relationships with employees and other stakeholders

100

self-reference criterion

In business, the idea that “we” differ from “them” and an unconscious reference to one’s own cultural values, experiences, and knowledge

100

laissez-faire

Adam Smith’s idea of the “invisible hand,” which is critical to capitalism because it assumes the market, through its own inherent mechanisms, keeps commerce in equilibrium

100

bimodal wealth distribution

Occurs when the middle class shrinks, resulting in highly concentrated wealth among the rich and increased numbers of poor people with few resources

100

International Monetary Fund

An international body that regulates monetary relationships between national economies

200

global business

A practice that brings together people from countries with different cultures, values, laws, and ethical standards

200

cultural relativism

The concept that morality varies from one culture to another and that “right” and “wrong” are defined differently

200

John Maynard Keynes

Argued that the state could stimulate economic growth and improve stability in the private sector through, for example, controlling interest rates, taxation, and public projects during the 1930s

200

rational economics

Based on the assumption that people are predictable and will maximize the utility of their choices relative to their needs and wants

200

United Nations Global Compact

A set of 10 principles that promote human rights, sustainability, and the eradication of corruption

300

national culture

A much broader concept than organizational culture and includes everything in our surroundings made by people—both tangible items, such as artifacts, and intangible entities, such as concepts and values

300

global common values

Certain values broadly accepted worldwide

300

Milton Friedman

Rejected the Keynesian conclusion that markets sometimes need intervention to function efficiently and believed deregulation could reach equilibrium without government intervention

300

behavioral economics

Assumes humans act irrationally because of genetics, emotions, learned behavior, and heuristics, or rules of thumb

300

World Trade Organization

Administers its own trade agreements, facilitates trade negotiations, settles trade disputes, and monitors the trade policies of member nations

400

individualism/collective dimension

Refers to how self-oriented members of a culture are in their behavior

400

risk compartmentalization

When profit centers within corporations are unaware of the overall consequences of their actions on the firm as a whole

400

Socialism

Refers to economic theories advocating the creation of a society when wealth and power are shared and distributed evenly based on the amount of work expended in production

400

multinational corporations

Public companies that operate on a global scale without significant ties to any one nation or region

400

dumping

The practice of charging high prices for products in domestic markets while selling the same products in foreign markets at low prices, often at below cost

500

power distance dimension

Refers to the power inequality between superiors and subordinates

500

Adam Smith

A professor of logic and moral philosophy during the late eighteenth century who developed critical economic ideas still considered important today

500

social democracy

Allows private ownership of property and also features a large government equipped to offer such services as education and health care to its citizens

500

Business for Social Responsibility

A globally based resource system that endorses following responsible business practices abroad

500

vertical system

A channel member (manufacturer, wholesaler, distributor, or retailer) has control of the entire business system, via ownership or contract, or through its purchasing ability