Global Trade
International Finance
Global Strategies
Cultural Awareness
Global Challenges
100

To send goods or products to another country for sale.

Export

100

The global currency that is most widely used in international business and trade transactions.

US Dollar

100

Giving another company permission to use your brand name, logo, or business model in exchange for a fee.

Franchising

100

The shared values, beliefs, customs, and behaviors of a group of people or a nation.

Culture

100

Dishonest or illegal behavior by powerful people or corporations, such as bribery.

Corruption

200

To buy and bring goods or products into your own country from abroad.

Import

200

The value of one country's currency compared to another country's currency.

Exchange rate

200

A business arrangement where two or more companies agree to pool their resources for a specific global project.

Joint venture

200

A language that is adopted as a common language between speakers whose native languages are different (e.g., English in business).

Lingua franca

200

A sudden shortage or disruption in the global network that delivers products from suppliers to customers.

Supply chain crisis

300

A tax or duty that a government charges on goods coming in from other countries.

Tariff

300

When a company invests money directly into businesses or factories located in another country.

Foreign Direct Investment

300

Moving a business process, like manufacturing or customer support, to another country to cut costs.

Outsourcing

300

The feeling of confusion or insecurity that someone experiences when doing business in an unfamiliar foreign environment.

Culture shock

300

A situation where big corporations compete unfairly or create a monopoly, stopping smaller businesses from growing.

Market dominance

400

A situation where a country exports more than it imports, creating a positive economic balance.

Trade surplus

400

A general and progressive increase in prices of goods and services across the world, reducing the purchasing power of money.

Inflation

400

When two global companies combine into one single company, or when one company buys another.

Merger and Acquisition

400

The specific rules of correct and polite behavior in professional and international settings.

Business etiquette

400

Making a company look more environmentally friendly than it actually is through false marketing.

Greenwashing

500

An official ban or restriction on trade with a particular country, usually for political reasons.

Embargo

500

A global financial institution based in Washington, D.C., that grants loans to countries for large development projects.

World Bank

500

Adapting global products or services to fit the local culture, language, and laws of a specific country.

Localization

500

The ability to understand, communicate with, and effectively interact with people across different cultures.

Cultural intelligence

500

The risk that a country's government will suddenly change its laws, taxes, or leadership, hurting foreign businesses.

Political risk