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International marketing / Philip R. Cateora, Fellow, Academy of International Business, University of Colorado, R. Bruce Money, Brigham Young University, Mary C. Gilly, University of California, Irvine, John L. Graham, University of California, Irvine.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Chennai : McGraw Hill Education (India) Private Limited, 2020Edition: Eighteen edition. Special Indian EditionDescription: xxviii, 680 pages : illustrations, maps ; 26 cmISBN:
  • 9789389538243
  • 9781259712357 (hardback)
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 658.8/4 C357i 2020 23
LOC classification:
  • HF1416 .C375 2020
Other classification:
  • BUS043000
Summary: "At the start of the last millennium, the Chinese were the preeminent international traders. Although a truly global trading system would not evolve until some 500 years later, Chinese silk had been available in Europe since Roman times. At the start of the last century, the British military, merchants, and manufacturers dominated the seas and international commerce. Literally, the sun did not set on the British Empire. At the start of this century, the United States had surged past a faltering Japan to retake the lead in global commerce. The American domination of information technology has since been followed by the political upheaval of 9/11 and the economic shocks of 2001 and 2008. China started the 21st century as the largest military threat to the United States, and within a decade it had become a leading, often difficult trading partner. What surprises do the new decade, century, and millennium hold in store for all of us? In this century, natural disasters and wars hampered commerce and human progress. Just in the last decade, we have witnessed the human tragedy and economic disaster of a 1000-year earthquake and tsunami and a nuclear meltdown in Japan; protests and revolutions-- the so-called Arab Spring--across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA); widespread economic protests across the developed countries; and the ongoing potential for a financial meltdown in the European Union. The battle to balance economic growth and stewardship of the environment continues. The globalization of markets has certainly accelerated through almost universal acceptance of the democratic free enterprise model and new communication technologies, including cell phones and the Internet"--
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Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books Premier University Business Library 658.84 C357i 2020 1 Available 26215
Books Books Premier University Business Library 658.84 C357i 2020 2 Available 26216
Books Books Premier University Business Library 658.84 C357i 2020 3 Checked out 20/10/2025 26217
Books Books Premier University Business Library 658.84 C357i 2020 4 Available 26218
Books Books Premier University Business Library 658.84 C357i 2020 5 Available 26219

Revised edition of International marketing, [2016]

"At the start of the last millennium, the Chinese were the preeminent international traders. Although a truly global trading system would not evolve until some 500 years later, Chinese silk had been available in Europe since Roman times. At the start of the last century, the British military, merchants, and manufacturers dominated the seas and international commerce. Literally, the sun did not set on the British Empire. At the start of this century, the United States had surged past a faltering Japan to retake the lead in global commerce. The American domination of information technology has since been followed by the political upheaval of 9/11 and the economic shocks of 2001 and 2008. China started the 21st century as the largest military threat to the United States, and within a decade it had become a leading, often difficult trading partner. What surprises do the new decade, century, and millennium hold in store for all of us? In this century, natural disasters and wars hampered commerce and human progress. Just in the last decade, we have witnessed the human tragedy and economic disaster of a 1000-year earthquake and tsunami and a nuclear meltdown in Japan; protests and revolutions-- the so-called Arab Spring--across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA); widespread economic protests across the developed countries; and the ongoing potential for a financial meltdown in the European Union. The battle to balance economic growth and stewardship of the environment continues. The globalization of markets has certainly accelerated through almost universal acceptance of the democratic free enterprise model and new communication technologies, including cell phones and the Internet"--

BBA, MBA, RMBA, EMBA

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