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Chapter 5
Global Logistics
Learning Objectives
 Describe the major similarities and
differences between domestic and global
logistics.
 Discuss the reasons for the increase in global
business activity.
 Define a global company.
 Explain Porter’s dynamic diamond theory of
global competitive advantage.
Learning Objectives
 Describe the critical changes affecting global
logistics.
 Explain the effect of the changing legal and
political environment in Europe, Asia, North
America, and South America.
 Discuss North American Free Trade
Agreement and its effect on logistics.
 Define the nature and benefit of a
Maquiladora.
Learning Objectives
 Explain the major transportation systems
available for global logistics.
 Distinguish among the global logistics
intermediaries, freight forwarders, customs
house brokers, non-vessel operating common
carriers, and export management companies.
Learning Objectives
 Explain the criteria used to select a port for
global shipments.
 Discuss warehousing and packaging
requirements for global shipments.
 Define the role of customs duties and free
trade zones.
Global Business Logistics
 Important issues to consider:
 To gain a competitive advantage, global
sourcing is a given for companies
engaging in global marketing strategies.
 The longer the supply chain, the more
cooperation and coordination is required
between production, marketing, purchasing
and the logistics management group.
The Magnitude of
Global Logistics Activity
 World trade is growing as fast logistics systems
have had the effect of shrinking the world,
empowering competitive trade.
 Foreign trade has grown in tonnage and in value for
the United States and other nations.
 Lower labor costs from international outsourcing is
a critical component of the supply chain.
 Focused manufacturing fits well into an
international logistics strategy.
Table 5-1
Top U.S. Trading Partners
Global Markets
and Global Corporations
 Trade barriers continue to fall, accelerating
global business activity.
 Global markets result from the general
homogenization of global needs and wants.
 Local needs suborned to lower-priced,
higher-quality products.
 Preferences for international products can
also be related to attempts to copy other
more prosperous cultures.
Global Competitive Strategy
 To effectively serve global markets, firms
should consider adopting integrated
worldwide strategies.
 These firms are more likely to search for
global sourcing for materials and
components, depots, assembly, distribution
centers, and logistics.
 Global firms typically design synchronous
strategies around technology, marketing,
manufacturing, and logistics.
Customer Service Strategies for
Global Markets: Four Characteristics
1. Marketing becomes standardized yet
customized.
2. Product life cycles shorten, sometimes to
less than one year.
3. Outsourcing and offshore manufacturing are
becoming more prevalent.
4. Marketing and manufacturing activities and
strategies tend to converge and be better
coordinated in firms operating globally.4
Customer Service
Strategies for Global Markets
 Logistics networks tend to become more
expansive and complex.
 Thus, lead times and inventory may rise.
 Logistics activities must be operated as a
system to provide a countervailing force.
 Most importantly, the service needs of
internationally-dispersed customers must
drive the design and implementation of the
logistics system.
Critical Factors and Key Trends:
Importance of Competitive Environment
 Michael Porter’s study concludes that “a
nation’s ability to upgrade its existing
advantages to the next level of technology
and productivity is the key to international
(global) success.”5
 Porter feels that the US loss of global market
share in advanced fields of transportation and
technology shows the US slipping recently in
international trade.
Critical Factors and Key Trends:
Porter’s Model
 Factor conditions
 Ability to transform basic factors into
competitive advantage
 Demand conditions
 Market size, buyer sophistication, exposure
 Related and supporting industries
 Partners in supply chain, manufacturers
 Company strategy, structure, and rivalry
 Market structure and nature of competition
Critical Factors and Key
Trends: Changes in
Logistics and Transportation
 Deregulation of the U.S. Ocean Liner
Industry
 Shipping Act of 1984 and Ocean Shipping
Reform Act of 1998 gave freedom to set
rates, establish service and capacity on
shipping lanes.
 Ocean rates now more flexible to move in
response to the laws of supply and
demand.
Critical Factors and Key Trends:
Changes in Logistics and Transportation
 Intermodalism
 Joint use of two or more transportation
modes.
 Microbridge moves logistics capabilities
from port-to-port through port-to-point
directly to point-to-point.
 Shipment Control
 High tech permits tracking & diversion of
shipments.
Figure 5-1
Types of International Intermodalism
Critical Factors and Key Trends:
Changes in Logistics and Transportation
 Free Trade Agreements
 NAFTA is the most current.
 ECM is the 15 country European
equivalent.
 APEC is the Pacific equivalent.
 Remaining customs barriers can impair
logistics activities where they remain.
 Cultural differences can result in shipment
delays where they are not understood.
Critical Factors and Key Trends:
Changes in Logistics and Transportation
 Currency Fluctuations
 The exchange rate of dollars to other
international currencies affects both the
volume and direction of global trade.
 The effects of weak or strong dollar
positions carry through to marketing and
logistics.
Table 5-2 Effect of Currency
Fluctuations on Exports and Imports
Scenario
U.S. $ Value
In Japanese
Yen
U.S. $ Cost
of 5000-Yen
Item
Yen Cost of
U.S. $1,000
Item
A 100 $ 50.00 100,000 yen
B 120 $ 41.67 120,000 yen
C 130 $ 38.46 130,000 yen
Changing Political and Legal
Environments
 A Single European Market
 Eastern Europe
 North American Free Trade Agreement
 Maquiladora Operations
 Asian Emergence
 New Directions
Changing Political and Legal
Environments: European Market
 230 million consumers
were established as one
market thru the 1987
Single European Act
 EU has eliminated:
 Physical barriers like
customs.
 Technical barriers like
health & safety issues.
 Fiscal barriers like
value-added tax and
excise taxes.
Changing Political and Legal
Environments Eastern Europe
 Currently restructuring but generally working to improve
from former communist-style governmental restrictions.
 Older infrastructure is holding these nations back from
full participation in global markets.
 Governments have been selling assets to use for capital
investment.
 Future is uncertain, but markets are large enough to
attract foreign capital if political environment is seen as
stable.
Changing Political and Legal
Environments: The North American
Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) of 1994
 360 million people market
 $6.6 trillion market
 Phasing out tariffs on more than 10,000
commodities over the next 10 to 15 years
 Poor transportation infrastructure remains in
Mexico.
 Labeling inconsistencies are problematic.
 NAFTA will mature eventually.
Figure 5-3A A Typical Truck
Shipment Crossing into Mexico
Changing Political and Legal
Environments: Maquiladora Operations
 Maquiladora Operations takes its name from
the region of Mexico in which the business
facilities are located.
 Companies such as General Motors have
built campus-style collections of assembly
plants, supplier facilities and housing in
Maquiladora.
 Currently more than 2,000 U.S./Mexico
facilities use the low wages, taxes, and low
duties of the Maquiladora.
Changing Political and Legal
Environments: Asian Emergence
 The Pacific Rim nations have emerged as key
players in the global business environment.
 In the first three months of 2000, imports from Pacific
Rim countries accounted for 32.9 percent of total
U.S. imports.
 Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore purchased
24.7 percent of U.S. exports in this same period.
 Japan is the leading regional supplier, followed by
China, Taiwan, and Korea.
 Low labor and high quality characterizes these Asian
nation’s raw materials and finished goods.
Changing Political and Legal
Environments: New Directions
 Offshore plants and logistics facilities
 Focus production plants often require
complex logistics facilities.
 General expansion of worldwide markets
 Worldwide growth of affluence
 Growth of Caribbean, Australian, African,
Russian, and Eastern European markets
On the Line: Holiday May Be
Hazardous to International Logistics
Systems
 Workers not on the job…logistics activities
come to a halt.
 Holidays vary by country and must be
known to international logistics managers.
 By scheduling pickup and delivery around a
country’s holidays, the logistics manager
can:
 Prevent disruptions in the international
supply chain;
 Maintain desired logistics service levels.
On the Line: 2001 Holidays for the United
States and Its Top Six Trading Partners
Global Transportation Options
 More complex than domestic due to distance
and number of parties involved
 Major international transportation modes
 Ocean
 Air
 Motor
 Rail
Global Transportation
Options: Ocean
 Ocean structure
 Liner – scheduled service; regular routes
 Charter – contract service; no set routes
 Private – service firm’s own logistics needs
 Include bulk, container, RO-RO
 Most pervasive and important global mode
 Revenues are substantial – see Table 5-3.
Table 5-3
Top Ten Ocean Carriers
Global Transportation
Options: Air
 Speed allows large compression of transit times.
 Linkages with package delivery and courier
services provide true point-to-point service.
 Rates have traditionally restricted cargo to low
density, high value goods.
 Volume is approximately 1% of movements, but
nearly 20% of the value.
 New airfreighters can carry up to 13 TEUs (20
foot containers).
Table 5-4
Major International Cargo Air Carriers
Global Transportation
Options: Motor
 Global motor characteristics of speed, safety,
reliability, and accessibility basically the same
as for domestic transportation.
 Container sizes are largely standardized into
20, 40, 45, 48, and 53 foot boxes.
 Paperwork can be streamlined by having a
bonded warehouse seal the container at point
of shipment and not opened until it reaches
its destination country.
Global Transportation
Options: Rail
 International rail movements are problematic.
 Rail gauges often vary.
 Containers maybe transloaded from rail to
ocean to rail and/or motor if standard
international sizes are used.
 Maritime bridge movements gain speed by
using an intermodal strategy.
Strategic Channel Intermediaries
 Foreign Freight
Forwarders
 Non-Vessel-
Operating Common
Carriers
 Export Management
Companies
 Export Trading
Companies
 Customs House
Brokers
 Ship Brokers
 Ship Agents
 Export Packers
 Ports
Strategic Channel Intermediaries:
Foreign Freight Forwarders
 Consolidate small shipments into
economical container or larger-sized lots.
 Used by small or inexperienced shippers.
 Consolidators and agents regulated by the
Federal Maritime Commission.
 Fee for service and/or commission from
shipping companies.
 Use ocean and air modes.
Strategic Channel Intermediaries:
Non-Vessel Operating Common Carriers
 These carriers are used to disperse traffic moving
to and from an inland port.
 These NVOCCs then collect traffic from inland
ports back to the ocean port cities.
 This service saves the shippers from having to pay
to return empty containers to the ocean carriers.
 NVOCC service widens markets of the ocean
carriers and provides expertise to the smaller
inland shippers.
Strategic Channel Intermediaries:
Export Management Companies
 Export Management Companies (EMCs) act
as a knowledgeable shippers agent in a
foreign country.
 Act as the sellers agent in getting orders, and
arranging for distribution, promotion, and
dealing with the foreign government.
 Exclusive arrangements are possible and the
EMC may sell with or without taking title to
the goods.
Strategic Channel Intermediaries:
Export Trading Companies
 Similar to the EMCs, the Export Trading
Companies (ETCs) export goods and
services.
 The ETC locates buyers, arranges for inland
and international transportation, and meeting
foreign government requirements.
 Allows small and medium-sized firms the
ability to compete globally.
Strategic Channel Intermediaries:
Customs House Brokers
 Oversee the movement of goods through
customs and ensures that paperwork
accompanying a shipment is in order.
 Operate under power of attorney from the
shipper and can pay any duty on freight.
 Much of the paperwork is done ahead of the
shipment using integrated computer systems,
greatly reducing the time it takes to clear
customs, thereby reducing transit times.
Strategic Channel Intermediaries: Ship
Brokers/Ship Agents/Export Packers
 Ship brokers act as agents in securing the
charter of a ship.
 Ship agents are the local (port) agent of the
ship operator when the ship is in port.
 Export packers supply a shipper specialized
export packing services to help with customs
and to protect the goods.
Strategic Channel
Intermediaries: Ports
 Port selection is a very important part
of the international logistics strategy.
 Different ports often specialize in different types
of shipments.
 Selecting the wrong port can add miles, time,
and therefore cost to a shipment not
appropriately routed.
 Overall door-to-door transit time and variability
most important factors.
Figure 5-4
Port Evaluation Factors
Table 5-5: Ranking of U.S. Ports by
Containers, Tons, and Cargo Value
By Containers By Tons By Cargo Value
Long Beach Houston Long Beach
Los Angeles New Orleans Los Angeles
NY & NJ South Louisiana NY & NJ
San Juan NY & NJ Houston
Oakland Corpus Christi Seattle
Seattle Hampton Roads Charleston
Charleston Beaumont Hampton Roads
Hampton Roads Long Beach Oakland
Tacoma Philadelphia New Orleans
Houston Morgan City Baltimore
Storage Facilities
 Storage may be necessary for containers,
bulk, or finished goods.
 This may require different types of in transit
facilities depending upon the method of
shipment and cargo type.
 Longer term storage may require a public or
bonded warehouse.
Packaging
 Export shipments generally require a higher
level of protection than domestic shipments
because of extra handling and the motion of
the ocean and its effect on cargo.
 Shippers expect to pay more for more
protection, as settling liability claims can be
very difficult due to the large number of firms
that may be handling the goods.
Figure 5-5 Some Symbols Used for
Packing Export Shipments
Governmental Influences
 Customs Regulation
 Other Customs Functions
 Foreign Trade Zones
Figure 5-6
Export-Import Flowchart
Governmental Influences:
Customs Regulation
 Customs regulations of the importing country
have the greatest effect on the international
movement of goods.
 In place to protect domestic industries from
unfair or predatory competition, these barriers
to trade are handled differently in various
countries.
 Duties are expressed either as a percent of
value, a fixed amount, or in combination.
Governmental Influences:
Other Customs Functions
 Determine that the goods value is as stated.
 Ensure that the goods are properly marked.
 Ensure that the items are permitted for entry.
 Ensure correct price and quantity.
 Control quota amounts.
Governmental Influences:
Foreign Trade Zones (FTZs)
 Goods enter without customs formalities, duty or
bond.
 Shippers can break bulk before entry.
 Goods can be processed, repacked, or remarked
to avoid fines before entry.
 FTZs can hold excess goods until the next quota
window.
 Buyer can test or sample before entry.
 Goods can be stored indefinitely and/or re-
exported without paying duty.
Chapter 5:
Summary and Review Questions
Students should review their knowledge of the
chapter by checking out the Summary and
Study Questions for Chapter 5.
This is the last slide for Chapter 5
End of Chapter 5 Slides
Global Logistics

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GLOBAL LOGISTICS

  • 2. Learning Objectives  Describe the major similarities and differences between domestic and global logistics.  Discuss the reasons for the increase in global business activity.  Define a global company.  Explain Porter’s dynamic diamond theory of global competitive advantage.
  • 3. Learning Objectives  Describe the critical changes affecting global logistics.  Explain the effect of the changing legal and political environment in Europe, Asia, North America, and South America.  Discuss North American Free Trade Agreement and its effect on logistics.  Define the nature and benefit of a Maquiladora.
  • 4. Learning Objectives  Explain the major transportation systems available for global logistics.  Distinguish among the global logistics intermediaries, freight forwarders, customs house brokers, non-vessel operating common carriers, and export management companies.
  • 5. Learning Objectives  Explain the criteria used to select a port for global shipments.  Discuss warehousing and packaging requirements for global shipments.  Define the role of customs duties and free trade zones.
  • 6. Global Business Logistics  Important issues to consider:  To gain a competitive advantage, global sourcing is a given for companies engaging in global marketing strategies.  The longer the supply chain, the more cooperation and coordination is required between production, marketing, purchasing and the logistics management group.
  • 7. The Magnitude of Global Logistics Activity  World trade is growing as fast logistics systems have had the effect of shrinking the world, empowering competitive trade.  Foreign trade has grown in tonnage and in value for the United States and other nations.  Lower labor costs from international outsourcing is a critical component of the supply chain.  Focused manufacturing fits well into an international logistics strategy.
  • 8. Table 5-1 Top U.S. Trading Partners
  • 9. Global Markets and Global Corporations  Trade barriers continue to fall, accelerating global business activity.  Global markets result from the general homogenization of global needs and wants.  Local needs suborned to lower-priced, higher-quality products.  Preferences for international products can also be related to attempts to copy other more prosperous cultures.
  • 10. Global Competitive Strategy  To effectively serve global markets, firms should consider adopting integrated worldwide strategies.  These firms are more likely to search for global sourcing for materials and components, depots, assembly, distribution centers, and logistics.  Global firms typically design synchronous strategies around technology, marketing, manufacturing, and logistics.
  • 11. Customer Service Strategies for Global Markets: Four Characteristics 1. Marketing becomes standardized yet customized. 2. Product life cycles shorten, sometimes to less than one year. 3. Outsourcing and offshore manufacturing are becoming more prevalent. 4. Marketing and manufacturing activities and strategies tend to converge and be better coordinated in firms operating globally.4
  • 12. Customer Service Strategies for Global Markets  Logistics networks tend to become more expansive and complex.  Thus, lead times and inventory may rise.  Logistics activities must be operated as a system to provide a countervailing force.  Most importantly, the service needs of internationally-dispersed customers must drive the design and implementation of the logistics system.
  • 13. Critical Factors and Key Trends: Importance of Competitive Environment  Michael Porter’s study concludes that “a nation’s ability to upgrade its existing advantages to the next level of technology and productivity is the key to international (global) success.”5  Porter feels that the US loss of global market share in advanced fields of transportation and technology shows the US slipping recently in international trade.
  • 14. Critical Factors and Key Trends: Porter’s Model  Factor conditions  Ability to transform basic factors into competitive advantage  Demand conditions  Market size, buyer sophistication, exposure  Related and supporting industries  Partners in supply chain, manufacturers  Company strategy, structure, and rivalry  Market structure and nature of competition
  • 15. Critical Factors and Key Trends: Changes in Logistics and Transportation  Deregulation of the U.S. Ocean Liner Industry  Shipping Act of 1984 and Ocean Shipping Reform Act of 1998 gave freedom to set rates, establish service and capacity on shipping lanes.  Ocean rates now more flexible to move in response to the laws of supply and demand.
  • 16. Critical Factors and Key Trends: Changes in Logistics and Transportation  Intermodalism  Joint use of two or more transportation modes.  Microbridge moves logistics capabilities from port-to-port through port-to-point directly to point-to-point.  Shipment Control  High tech permits tracking & diversion of shipments.
  • 17. Figure 5-1 Types of International Intermodalism
  • 18. Critical Factors and Key Trends: Changes in Logistics and Transportation  Free Trade Agreements  NAFTA is the most current.  ECM is the 15 country European equivalent.  APEC is the Pacific equivalent.  Remaining customs barriers can impair logistics activities where they remain.  Cultural differences can result in shipment delays where they are not understood.
  • 19. Critical Factors and Key Trends: Changes in Logistics and Transportation  Currency Fluctuations  The exchange rate of dollars to other international currencies affects both the volume and direction of global trade.  The effects of weak or strong dollar positions carry through to marketing and logistics.
  • 20. Table 5-2 Effect of Currency Fluctuations on Exports and Imports Scenario U.S. $ Value In Japanese Yen U.S. $ Cost of 5000-Yen Item Yen Cost of U.S. $1,000 Item A 100 $ 50.00 100,000 yen B 120 $ 41.67 120,000 yen C 130 $ 38.46 130,000 yen
  • 21. Changing Political and Legal Environments  A Single European Market  Eastern Europe  North American Free Trade Agreement  Maquiladora Operations  Asian Emergence  New Directions
  • 22. Changing Political and Legal Environments: European Market  230 million consumers were established as one market thru the 1987 Single European Act  EU has eliminated:  Physical barriers like customs.  Technical barriers like health & safety issues.  Fiscal barriers like value-added tax and excise taxes.
  • 23. Changing Political and Legal Environments Eastern Europe  Currently restructuring but generally working to improve from former communist-style governmental restrictions.  Older infrastructure is holding these nations back from full participation in global markets.  Governments have been selling assets to use for capital investment.  Future is uncertain, but markets are large enough to attract foreign capital if political environment is seen as stable.
  • 24. Changing Political and Legal Environments: The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) of 1994  360 million people market  $6.6 trillion market  Phasing out tariffs on more than 10,000 commodities over the next 10 to 15 years  Poor transportation infrastructure remains in Mexico.  Labeling inconsistencies are problematic.  NAFTA will mature eventually.
  • 25. Figure 5-3A A Typical Truck Shipment Crossing into Mexico
  • 26. Changing Political and Legal Environments: Maquiladora Operations  Maquiladora Operations takes its name from the region of Mexico in which the business facilities are located.  Companies such as General Motors have built campus-style collections of assembly plants, supplier facilities and housing in Maquiladora.  Currently more than 2,000 U.S./Mexico facilities use the low wages, taxes, and low duties of the Maquiladora.
  • 27. Changing Political and Legal Environments: Asian Emergence  The Pacific Rim nations have emerged as key players in the global business environment.  In the first three months of 2000, imports from Pacific Rim countries accounted for 32.9 percent of total U.S. imports.  Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore purchased 24.7 percent of U.S. exports in this same period.  Japan is the leading regional supplier, followed by China, Taiwan, and Korea.  Low labor and high quality characterizes these Asian nation’s raw materials and finished goods.
  • 28. Changing Political and Legal Environments: New Directions  Offshore plants and logistics facilities  Focus production plants often require complex logistics facilities.  General expansion of worldwide markets  Worldwide growth of affluence  Growth of Caribbean, Australian, African, Russian, and Eastern European markets
  • 29. On the Line: Holiday May Be Hazardous to International Logistics Systems  Workers not on the job…logistics activities come to a halt.  Holidays vary by country and must be known to international logistics managers.  By scheduling pickup and delivery around a country’s holidays, the logistics manager can:  Prevent disruptions in the international supply chain;  Maintain desired logistics service levels.
  • 30. On the Line: 2001 Holidays for the United States and Its Top Six Trading Partners
  • 31. Global Transportation Options  More complex than domestic due to distance and number of parties involved  Major international transportation modes  Ocean  Air  Motor  Rail
  • 32. Global Transportation Options: Ocean  Ocean structure  Liner – scheduled service; regular routes  Charter – contract service; no set routes  Private – service firm’s own logistics needs  Include bulk, container, RO-RO  Most pervasive and important global mode  Revenues are substantial – see Table 5-3.
  • 33. Table 5-3 Top Ten Ocean Carriers
  • 34. Global Transportation Options: Air  Speed allows large compression of transit times.  Linkages with package delivery and courier services provide true point-to-point service.  Rates have traditionally restricted cargo to low density, high value goods.  Volume is approximately 1% of movements, but nearly 20% of the value.  New airfreighters can carry up to 13 TEUs (20 foot containers).
  • 35. Table 5-4 Major International Cargo Air Carriers
  • 36. Global Transportation Options: Motor  Global motor characteristics of speed, safety, reliability, and accessibility basically the same as for domestic transportation.  Container sizes are largely standardized into 20, 40, 45, 48, and 53 foot boxes.  Paperwork can be streamlined by having a bonded warehouse seal the container at point of shipment and not opened until it reaches its destination country.
  • 37. Global Transportation Options: Rail  International rail movements are problematic.  Rail gauges often vary.  Containers maybe transloaded from rail to ocean to rail and/or motor if standard international sizes are used.  Maritime bridge movements gain speed by using an intermodal strategy.
  • 38. Strategic Channel Intermediaries  Foreign Freight Forwarders  Non-Vessel- Operating Common Carriers  Export Management Companies  Export Trading Companies  Customs House Brokers  Ship Brokers  Ship Agents  Export Packers  Ports
  • 39. Strategic Channel Intermediaries: Foreign Freight Forwarders  Consolidate small shipments into economical container or larger-sized lots.  Used by small or inexperienced shippers.  Consolidators and agents regulated by the Federal Maritime Commission.  Fee for service and/or commission from shipping companies.  Use ocean and air modes.
  • 40. Strategic Channel Intermediaries: Non-Vessel Operating Common Carriers  These carriers are used to disperse traffic moving to and from an inland port.  These NVOCCs then collect traffic from inland ports back to the ocean port cities.  This service saves the shippers from having to pay to return empty containers to the ocean carriers.  NVOCC service widens markets of the ocean carriers and provides expertise to the smaller inland shippers.
  • 41. Strategic Channel Intermediaries: Export Management Companies  Export Management Companies (EMCs) act as a knowledgeable shippers agent in a foreign country.  Act as the sellers agent in getting orders, and arranging for distribution, promotion, and dealing with the foreign government.  Exclusive arrangements are possible and the EMC may sell with or without taking title to the goods.
  • 42. Strategic Channel Intermediaries: Export Trading Companies  Similar to the EMCs, the Export Trading Companies (ETCs) export goods and services.  The ETC locates buyers, arranges for inland and international transportation, and meeting foreign government requirements.  Allows small and medium-sized firms the ability to compete globally.
  • 43. Strategic Channel Intermediaries: Customs House Brokers  Oversee the movement of goods through customs and ensures that paperwork accompanying a shipment is in order.  Operate under power of attorney from the shipper and can pay any duty on freight.  Much of the paperwork is done ahead of the shipment using integrated computer systems, greatly reducing the time it takes to clear customs, thereby reducing transit times.
  • 44. Strategic Channel Intermediaries: Ship Brokers/Ship Agents/Export Packers  Ship brokers act as agents in securing the charter of a ship.  Ship agents are the local (port) agent of the ship operator when the ship is in port.  Export packers supply a shipper specialized export packing services to help with customs and to protect the goods.
  • 45. Strategic Channel Intermediaries: Ports  Port selection is a very important part of the international logistics strategy.  Different ports often specialize in different types of shipments.  Selecting the wrong port can add miles, time, and therefore cost to a shipment not appropriately routed.  Overall door-to-door transit time and variability most important factors.
  • 47. Table 5-5: Ranking of U.S. Ports by Containers, Tons, and Cargo Value By Containers By Tons By Cargo Value Long Beach Houston Long Beach Los Angeles New Orleans Los Angeles NY & NJ South Louisiana NY & NJ San Juan NY & NJ Houston Oakland Corpus Christi Seattle Seattle Hampton Roads Charleston Charleston Beaumont Hampton Roads Hampton Roads Long Beach Oakland Tacoma Philadelphia New Orleans Houston Morgan City Baltimore
  • 48. Storage Facilities  Storage may be necessary for containers, bulk, or finished goods.  This may require different types of in transit facilities depending upon the method of shipment and cargo type.  Longer term storage may require a public or bonded warehouse.
  • 49. Packaging  Export shipments generally require a higher level of protection than domestic shipments because of extra handling and the motion of the ocean and its effect on cargo.  Shippers expect to pay more for more protection, as settling liability claims can be very difficult due to the large number of firms that may be handling the goods.
  • 50. Figure 5-5 Some Symbols Used for Packing Export Shipments
  • 51. Governmental Influences  Customs Regulation  Other Customs Functions  Foreign Trade Zones
  • 53. Governmental Influences: Customs Regulation  Customs regulations of the importing country have the greatest effect on the international movement of goods.  In place to protect domestic industries from unfair or predatory competition, these barriers to trade are handled differently in various countries.  Duties are expressed either as a percent of value, a fixed amount, or in combination.
  • 54. Governmental Influences: Other Customs Functions  Determine that the goods value is as stated.  Ensure that the goods are properly marked.  Ensure that the items are permitted for entry.  Ensure correct price and quantity.  Control quota amounts.
  • 55. Governmental Influences: Foreign Trade Zones (FTZs)  Goods enter without customs formalities, duty or bond.  Shippers can break bulk before entry.  Goods can be processed, repacked, or remarked to avoid fines before entry.  FTZs can hold excess goods until the next quota window.  Buyer can test or sample before entry.  Goods can be stored indefinitely and/or re- exported without paying duty.
  • 56. Chapter 5: Summary and Review Questions Students should review their knowledge of the chapter by checking out the Summary and Study Questions for Chapter 5. This is the last slide for Chapter 5
  • 57. End of Chapter 5 Slides Global Logistics