Friday, December 9, 2011

International Business Law


(Images: "Abbott Labs." Bloomberg Business Week. 2008. Web. 09 Dec. 2011. .)
International business law is an extremely large topic. When one uses the term of international business law there is no one specific image that comes to mind. The reason that my group struggled to begin our project with international business law is because not one topic stood out to us. Between our collaboration, you can now read our blog on the topic of international law court case’s and outsourcing. Mr. Witty, an in-house lawyer representing Abbott Laboratories, made a point about international law that holds true in every international business law job; the topic is so broad that you will never be able to understand the entire topic. When Mr. Witty’s visited our classroom, we learned that Abbott Laboratories has undergone massive expansion in the last five years and now has many lawyers around the world to oversee the operations and contracting for their products. The company has to oversee so many different rules and styles of law around the world that they have at least one lawyer for every area their products are being massively distributed. According to Mr. Witty, the work of an international business lawyer “...depends on the job.” He feels that there are people all around the globe who deal with separate areas on international law and international business. In one morning Mr. Witty, “spoke with people in the Philippines (employee conduct issue); China (duties/marketing issue); and Russia (employee evaluation).” For myself, reading the amount of different topics and issues that Mr. Witty deals with daily consequently, made me realize how many different applications there are to law and business around the world. We are not limited to only the parts of the world that we can see. With new applications like online video chatting (skype) we may undergo globalization and open our job market to more lawyers with an international business background.


Below we looked into an important international law court case, to apply how international law and contract law come into play. This case is overseen by the one of The United Nations principle organ (branch) known as The International Court of Justice. Interestingly enough, The International Court of Justice is the only branch of the United Nations that is not held in New York City. I question the intentions of the members of the United Nations in having every operation held in NYC except for the justice court which is held in the Netherlands. I personally did not realize the importance in having the justice courts far away from the entire operations of the United Nations until I discovered through research that the court’s judges should not be impacted in any way by outside impacts in making their court case decisions. In order to read more into the recent and important court cases looks at the case law section.

The other important aspect of international business law lead us to focus our attention on was the highly debatable topic of outsourcing. In that section, you can find a intellectual argument against outsourcing and what the United States needs to begin doing in order for us to regain our worldly power in business over the vastly expanding countries like China. 


International - Case Law
In an oil mining town of Tyumen, Russia a judge rejected two lawsuits brought by Andrew Prokhorov, a minority shareholder in Russia’s third largest oil firm. One lawsuit for 13 billion aimed at BP and the other for 2.8 billion against two BP nominees on the board of operation unit TNK-BP Holding. Mr. Prokhorov has said that TNK-BP suffered financial losses because it had been excluded from a planned alliance between Rosneft and BP.Mr. Prokhorov is planning to appeal this decision saying that he was only given an approximate two hours to state his case and therefore, not enough time to present all the evidence. While BP on the other hand stays firm behind its victory saying that the grounds for the lawsuit were not proven in court.This all started with a misunderstanding between TNK-BP and BP when BP signed a contract with a Russian oil company Rosneft. The contract determined the two companies would search the Kara Sea together for oil. TNK-BP says that BP violated an exclusivity clause where TNK-BP would get th
(Image: "BP Opens Arctic Rosneft Too TNK-BP." Mining News and Journal. Web. 09 Dec. 2011. .)
e first chance at a deal before any other company. Now, because of the lawsuit, Rosneft backed out of the contract with BP and has begun working with an American company ExxonMobil. I believe that TNK-BP has legal rights to sue BP for failing to present them with the opportunity of dealing before they presented it to TNK-BP’s competitors (Rosneft and others). TNK had a exclusivity agreement with BP, before BP engaged in business with other companys in Russia and Eastern Europe. Therefore, they must present the opportunity to TNK-BP first. This contract keeps business going and due to BP violating it, I believe that TNK has its right to sue BP. They should be reimbursed for the money they could have made if they had been offered the opportunity first.


Outsourcing

Since the economic recession began in October of 2009, the international economy has been in shambles. Unemployment rates are similar in numbers to the Great Depression. Furthermore, domestic corporations are moving their factories to developing countries overseas because of the opportunity to give people jobs for lower salaries. In addition, they are still able to make their products without the major taxes that they must pay to make them in United States. However, they may be sacrificing the quality of the product that is being made overseas. Some people argue that outsourcing helps to spread out jobs to developing countries, which would contribute to healthier world economy. However, I believe that outsourcing hurts the world economy more than it helps it. Mr. Peter Witty, an expert in international law, stated that, “In a simplistic way, outsourcing current manufacturing jobs obviously hurts those people who lose their jobs as a result, and their inability to spend as much money during unemployment as they would during their employment hurts the larger economy.” This clearly indicates that the economy cannot afford to make this big of a sacrifice for a long term solution to the recession. Outsourcing jobs forces American consumers to deal with terrible customer service, lead-infused toys for their children, and less jobs for them to choose from. If jobs were to be brought back to the United States, the quality of products would go up dramatically because the United States has strict regulations on how products are made; ensuring dangerous materials don’t get into the clothes, toys and electronics that use. Also, jobs would be created instantly from bringing big corporations jobs back to our shores. In my opinion, the world economy would benefit from the United States’ success because our economy has ties all over the world, if the United States finally carried itself out of the red, then the rest of the world would soon follow. Lastly, I believe that outsourcing is not beneficial to the United States economy because it gives corporations an excuse to leave the country. In this day in age, most corporations are looking for tax breaks/tax incentives to stay in the United States. However, the government has to deal with the old children’s moral, once one gets it everyone will want that same thing. So instead of providing these tax breaks to the greedy corporations, the government is telling them to take their business elsewhere. Clearly, the government doesn’t care where the corporations make their products, as long as the corporations continue to rake in the billions of dollars. All in all, outsourcing jobs is commonly thought to help the world economy because it is stretched the American successes to other developing countries. However, outsourcing has proven to be toxic to the economy because it promotes “quantity is better than quality” logic, which has too many loopholes to work for a long time. To clarify, the supply of the products being made may be plentiful, but if the products are not made well, then the demand will continue to decrease. Consequently, there will be a major surplus on the products being made overseas, forcing the many huge corporations to go back to the drawing board. In the long run, outsourcing jobs is harming our world economy more than it is helping us.


Works Cited:
Mariner, Joanne. "UNITED STATES v. INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS MACHINES CORP :: 517 U.S. 843 :: 1996." US Supreme Court Cases from Justia & Oyez. Web. 09 Dec. 2011. .
"Ethics - Guide to the Practice of Law." Lawyers, Attorneys, Law Firms – Find Legal Information. Web. 09 Dec. 2011.


4 comments:

Mindy said...

Mr. Witty also commented with this information: "However, outsourcing jobs also allows companies to achieve a lower cost structure which (a) helps them make more money and, in turn, hire more people who will contribute to the economy; (b) lower cost structure also allows companies to lower prices and (c) outsourcing can also allow people who were originally trained for manufacturing work to become re-trained so that they can work in a position that allows for a higher salary (e.g., moving from a factory position to a white collar position such as IT). This is the other side of outsourcing. Don't we need to consider how outsourcing can help our economy and U.S. businesses?

John said...

Overall, after reading this article, I really find Mr.Witty's opinion to be the most interesting part. While one would probably think that outsourcing is really helping many other countries in the world, such as China and India, by bringing hordes of companies coming for cheap labor, it seems strange to think that this is actually somewhat bad for those nations when this international commerce is spurring so much development. While outsourcing may certainly be negative for more developed countries, such as the United States, I find it tough to really make a case for outsourcing hurting their modern host countries. Outsourcing may be bad for "us", but I dont believe that necessarily makes it bad overall.

Nirali said...

I liked the way you used examples to help explain your topic, since it's hard to actually cover such a large topic. I really liked all the input from Mr. Witty, because input from an expert always helps to understand a topic.
In a way, I agree with your view on outsourcing, but at the same time, I dont think it's too bad, beause it's helping other countries too. So i guess at this point, I'm neutral on the subject but the information is great!

Anonymous said...

What struck me the most about this blog is the view on outsourcing. It provided an in depth look at what exactly outsourcing does to the economy. These factors include loss of money flow into our economy, loss of jobs, poor service, and overall economic recession.