Marketing in a Less Developed Country
A less developed country is that country with a Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of less than 2% of global trade in goods relative to other countries. Less developed countries are characterized by little industry and sometimes a comparatively high dependence on foreign aid. These countries are grouped as the poorest and weakest market economies and consist of more than 880 million people. They rely heavily on exports of agricultural products whose prices keep on fluctuating fetching low price in the international market while they import most of the industrial and manufactured goods from developed countries a reason for continued balance of payment deficits, resulting into high debt burdens which have kept them as beggars' in the international community thus a continuous vicious cycle of poverty (UN-OHRLLS, 2011).
Less developed countries are also characterized by low level of socio-economic development with weak human and institutional capacities, low income disparities and inequalities and more often than not suffer from bad governance, political instabilities, internal and external conflicts. To name just but a few, the less developed countries include; Angola, Madagascar, Malawi, Togo, Cambodia, Bangladesh, Yemen, Solomon Islands, and Haiti.
Abstract
The essay looks at the various intricacies that are involved in the marketing that companies marketing their products in LDCs have to go through. These challenges involve cross-border trade terms and the tariffs as well as trade conditions, market feasibility study and the strategic planning that is totally different from the developed world, the scramble for the market in these regions by the multinationals and what the MNCs do not do to sufficiently tape the potential of the LDCs.
On the other hand, the paper divulges the significance and the centrality of the market in the LDC as a new economic force with potential for the investments due to the population available and the political stability that is becoming stronger with each passing day, the extent of technological changes and how this influences the market trends.
Marketing in LDCs
In the 21st century, the term marketing has developed to a new meaning and understanding especially in the modern times where there is great awakening of business extending their operations beyond their geographical borders to international borders. Marketing can be taken to mean, anticipation and identification of customer needs and requirements so as to be able to meet them profitably or achieve the intended organizational goals and objectives (The times 100, 2011).
Marketing today seeks to find out what the customers really want. Thus the marketing department will align the necessary resources required for research to ensure that production of goods and services are closely linked to the needs and expectations of customers in a defined market.
The less developed countries (LDCs) or the emerging markets have become a key market area for multinationals aiming to stem competition in their home countries. The LDCs market is of concern to these multinationals unlike before because population in the LDCs has plummeted like never before, leaving a large opening of goods and services. Currently, the estimated world population is 6,991,318,084 according to the United Nations Population Fund. This has triggered rapid growth in less developed regions as a result of low mortality rates, longer life expectancy and a larger segment of youth population (UNFP, 2011).
According to the fund, it is estimated that the world population will hit 10.1 billion by 2100 and 9.3 billion by the middle of this century. This growth will come from LDCs and therefore the market for LDCs has started experiencing a new dynamic of scramble almost similar like the one experienced during the colonial era.
Since this change has occurred in virtually all aspects of business and personal life, marketing researchers are faced with the challenge of conducting research that is of highest possible quality that will aid organizations in the their decision making processes while laying out strategies of market penetration in order to seize the opportunities of the rapidly growing population...
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