Hofstede's Framework

Categories: Financial Theory, Econ

A theory developed to rate a country’s culture.

It’s useful for companies looking to expand globally, as it gives somewhat of a peep into what to expect. Of course, the general advice is to expect the unexpected. There are five parts to the framework:

Power Distance: How well people deal with the disparity of wealth and power. There are hierarchies. Some cultures aren’t thrilled with big gaps; others deal with gaps so big we should just call them a disparity abyss.

Individualism vs. Collectivism: On one end of the scale, people are free to be themselves. On the other end, everyone is the Borg. Usually, cultures fall somewhere in the continuum.

Masculinity vs. Femininity: The name is a little misleading. It’s how much a culture recognizes equalities between men and women…socially, at work, and legally.

Uncertainty Avoidance: A culture that doesn’t like uncertainty will stack up pages and pages of laws and regulations to try to control it. If a culture doesn’t care all that much, they basically say, “Hey, whatever, we’ll figure it out.”

Long-term vs. Short-term Orientation: Whether or not there is cultural ADHD. Long-term cultures are future-oriented; short-term cultures are “right here, right now, forget everything else.” Countries with short-term cultures tend to rack up debt to solve immediate problems and kick the can of paying it back as far down the road as possible.

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Econ: What is Public Policy Design?2 Views

00:00

And finance Allah shmoop What is public policy design for

00:07

the government Laws and public policy are two sides of

00:11

the same coin laws are actually written down you know

00:14

very official like in the U S Federal laws had

00:17

to go through a long process of being a bill

00:19

before getting to be a law Will bills have to

00:22

go through Congress sit on the president's desk a while

00:24

gathering dust and then jump through all kinds of food

00:27

before turning themselves into laws Public policy is all about

00:31

how those laws air actually implemented or carried out Oftentimes

00:36

the laws we create our more idealistic rather than realistic

00:40

like we just don't always have All the resource is

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to enforce all of the laws that means like in

00:45

all of economics we have to pick and choose how

00:48

we spend Our limited resource is in the face of

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unlimited wants And yes of course different political leanings at

00:55

different times result in very different public policy design While

00:59

most laws air staying the same well how those laws

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or carried out via public policy designed can very drastically

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depending on policy goals of well who is in power

01:09

at that time mean green Controversial machine and fastest growing

01:15

industry at the moment in the U S Marijuana US

01:18

federal law defines marijuana as a Class one drug which

01:22

means it's one of the worst of the worst class

01:25

one drugs or drugs deemed by the federal government to

01:27

have no medicinal purpose and should not be used ever

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even under the supervision of a doctor Well Meanwhile states

01:34

around the US have been increasingly passing laws saying that

01:36

medicinal marijuana and in some cases recreational marijuana is totally

01:42

chill Well the federal law that whole Class one classifications

01:46

think it says that federal law enforcement legally has the

01:50

right toe bust any marijuana business or users or even

01:53

doctors that they want from a recreational twentysomething pot smoker

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to a sixty something medicinal You use your whip cancer

02:01

or block homer or something Well the federal government could

02:03

enforce the federal law but they really don't There are

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limited federal cops on hand They're not gonna bust down

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granny's door while she's taking her doctor prescribed pot pills

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for her chronic back pain you know sory Well In

02:15

two thousand thirteen the head of the Department of Justice

02:18

issued this thing called the Coal memo Named after the

02:21

author Attorney General Kohl Wolf the memo is a unique

02:24

written example of public policy design That memo stated that

02:28

the U S Department of Justice with its limited resource

02:31

is would not enforce the federal illegality of marijuana in

02:35

states where marijuana was voted to be legal Assuming these

02:39

states were being will generally responsible about it As long

02:42

as the states were regulating their growth distribution sale taxes

02:46

in someone the Justice Department would be hands off on

02:49

state legal marijuana businesses and consumers Instead the Justice Department

02:53

said it would use its limited resource is to help

02:56

states make sure that marijuana was not crossing state borders

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illegally not causing violence and accidents and not making profits

03:04

for gangs and mobs and cartels Right In two thousand

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eighteen there was a new sheriff in town attorney general

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that is being known A critic of Marijuana KG Jeff

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Sessions rescinded the cold memo It was his way of

03:16

changing public policy for how the federal government would handle

03:20

the distribution of marijuana Well since the marijuana industry in

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the U S Has a whole lot of momentum and

03:25

is making a lot of tax money for states governors

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and senators from marijuana legal states said That's not very

03:31

dope of you sir Well some political critics say the

03:34

cold memo was an overreach of political power since it

03:37

varied so much from the written law which made it

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a okay to rescind some economists Ava Calm Emma was

03:43

on the right track Since bringing marijuana into the legal

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sphere makes it regulate herbal and taxable which could reduce

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cartel violence and pump money into you know the U

03:53

S economy instead of well you know into those cartel

03:56

pockets everyone else says Well if that's not the federal

04:00

policy on marijuana now what is the policy Well many

04:04

believe the actions of the DOJ won't change too much

04:06

mostly because they've got bigger fish to fry with Their

04:09

limited resource is so far not too much of a

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kerfuffle has been made since the Cold memo was shut

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down Well states and cities are still making moves to

04:16

make marijuana legal in the DOJ is mostly spending its

04:18

energy elsewhere So yeah public policy designed can completely change

04:22

how laws interpreted and carried out in the real world

04:24

Unlike the coal memo most public policy design and communication

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is way less clear cut with so many actors involved

04:31

you know from firms and regulators To people and politicians

04:35

public policy is a messy complicated and infuriating process So

04:39

messy complicated and infuriating Yeah sounds like our tinder profile 00:04:43.578 --> [endTime] Please wipe right

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