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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper comparing business structure and decision-making in Germany and the United States. The pyramidal structure is common among large businesses, but small entrepreneurial organizations are much less rigid in both countries. Even very small companies compare between Germany and the United States, however. Overall, Germany business is more formal, but it is structured in much the same way as that within the United States and decisions are made in much the same way in both countries. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: CC6_KSintlBizGerUS.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Both Germany and the United States have been home to some of the worlds leading businesses, both currently and in the past. German business often is more formal
than that in the US, but in structure and decision-making business in the two countries is quite similar. Germany German fortunes have risen
and fallen throughout the 20th century, but Germany remains the wealthiest and most highly populated of all the European nations. Despite its former political divisions, Germany consistently has been
known for more than a century for its precision engineering. Whether the product is Daimler or BMW cars, photographic equipment or Siemens Medical equipment and applications, German engineering has
been and remains an envy of much of the Western world. It is quite appropriate to equate the precision of German engineering to
the manner in which Germans prefer to conduct their business transactions. They are precise in information and punctuality, and a business meeting is just that. It is not
a social occasion; the issue of "small talk" is one foreign to them. Whereas zeroing in on the point of a meeting would be bad form in Japan or
China, it is expected in Germany (Sabath, 1999). Germanys lower economic productivity and high unemployment rates have persisted throughout much of the decade
of the 1990s and into the new century, but it was for many years the linchpin of the larger European economy. The Deutsche mark was the currency to which
all leading international currencies - including the dollar - was pegged following Breton Woods in the late 1940s, and it was Germany that was able to force through stringent economic
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