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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper discussing whether product or safety standards will prevent Tyco International Electronics from being able to operate profitably in Brazil. There is no reason that Tyco International should hesitate to enter the Brazilian market; there is no reason for it to be hesitant to place a manufacturing facility there. Government may have some broad guidelines required of the company, but none of those requirements will be of an oppressive nature not cognizant of business needs as well as those of the consumer. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSBraMfgReq.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
has its own set of product and service standards that it accepts as routine and minimum standard. Differences in acceptance of these issues varies from country to country, and
results from a combination of cultural perspective and government regulation. As example, vehicular emissions standards are much more relaxed in Brazil than in California, increasing the number of product
choices available to Brazil if the local market accepts the products. Other standards apply to manufacturing standards, such as the quality of effluent
leaving the manufacturing facility for whatever type of product that might be involved. These are fully governmental in nature and are presented to manufacturers in the form of regulations
by which manufacturers must abide in order to remain in business in the country. Businesses contemplating entering any international market for the purposes
of both producing and selling specific products within that market must first explore the product, service and manufacturing standards acceptable both by tradition and by national law. The purpose
here is to assess the effects of this combination on the ability of Tyco International Electronics to profitably operate within Brazil. Attitude
Toward Business Brazil has been working diligently to expand its international presence, while simultaneously working to become even more important to the regional
economy of South America. It is not as business-friendly as is Singapore, which maintains a totally open entrepreneurial atmosphere, but it still actively seeks foreign direct investment (FDI).
That FDI typically arrives in the form of construction of some manufacturing facility that provides jobs to the locale immediately surrounding it and positively contributing to the overall economic stability
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