Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Malawi and Tobacco Essay -- Trade Tobacco Malawi Essays
Malawi and Tobacco    What strategies can Malawi use to overcome problems relating to a change   in demand of its main export, tobacco.    QUESTION- what strategies can Malawi use to overcome problems relating  to a change in demand of its main export, tobacco?    Malawi, a LEDC, located in Southern Africa, has a population of 10  million. Tobacco is its main export and this provides the majority of  the countries export revenues. It has become dependant on exporting  tobacco to firms based in MEDC's such as the United States. Demand for  cigarettes has recently decreased because of health and ethical  reasons. Cigarettes, has reached the end on its product lifecycle.  However South East Asia remains a growing market, because of the  effects of globalisation and dumping. The decrease in demand is a  major problem for Malawi, a country that is not market orientated or  market aware. Decline in demand for cigarettes will obviously have a  direct effect on demand for tobacco because they are complimentary  products. With decreased demand for its crops of tobacco, Malawi will  find itself in a very dangerous situation that will not only threaten  its economic position but the very lives of its population.    Another concern that Malawi must take into account is the state of the  tobacco industry. At present the market could be described as an  oligopoly (see appendix) where suppliers compete on price. The outcome  of this is that the firms involved have a high market share and  therefore have much power to control supply and demand. They have the  power to control prices of tobacco and they can exploit countries like  Malawi. The national economy is dictated by exports of tobacco. The  decreased revenue, due to loss of demand, will an...              ...E UK (BRANDS):    Two firms, Gallaher and Imperial Tobacco, who between them, control  around 80% of the market, dominate the cigarette and tobacco market in  the United Kingdom. One other major firm, British American Tobacco  (BAT), manufactures cigarettes in the UK but sells almost all of them  abroad. In 1999 BAT merged with Rothmans International thereby  increasing its share of the world tobacco market to 15.4%, just behind  the world leader Philip Morris which controls 17% of the global  market.      BIBLIOGRAPHY    http://www.ash.org.uk                         http://www.tobacco.org    http://www.mcspotlight.org    http://www.cdc.gov    http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/Country_Specific/Malawi.html    http://allafrica.com    www.google.co.uk    www.bbc.co.uk    www.altavista.com    www.theguardian.co.uk    Nuffield Business and economics- Students Book                        
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