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What is International Purchasing

Handbook of Research on Intrapreneurship and Organizational Sustainability in SMEs
Purchasing refers to the activities related with the acquisition of goods, raw materials or services necessary for firms to accomplish their business goals. This is referred as international purchasing when those purchasing activities are carried out in international markets to support the firm’s operations and ensure a reliable source of supply. With the economic globalization process one can experience that domestic and international purchasing activities are becoming blurred and are converging in a single function within firms. The main reasons for firms to purchase internationally are the following ones: insufficient domestic capacity; changes in the business environment; lower prices, better quality, better delivery and access better technology.
Published in Chapter:
Inward Internationalization: Important Challenges Among SMEs
António Carrizo Moreira (University of Aveiro, Portugal), Luis Miguel D. F. Ferreira (Universidade de Coimbra, Portugal), and Pedro Miguel Freitas da Silva (University of Aveiro, Portugal)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-3543-0.ch012
Abstract
The existing literature on internationalization and purchasing is vast; however, the inward internationalization perspective is an under-researched topic. In this chapter, the authors review the literature on internationalization of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) to understand the main reasons behind international purchasing and the role of experience on internationalization. Using a survey and descriptive statistics, the results from 56 respondents show that SMEs source from a small number of countries and hold those relationships for several years. The main reasons underlying international purchases are lower prices and better product quality, regardless of goods availability on the domestic market. This chapter has some limitations concerning its exploratory nature, pertaining to its sample size. Some future research avenues are presented such as a deeper look on how internationalization processes differ when SMEs begin their activity by inward rather than by outward activities.
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