Bunge: Food, Fuel, and World Markets
Khanna, Tarun and Mingo, Santiago and West, Jonathan (2007) Bunge: Food, Fuel, and World Markets. Other. Harvard Business School. Full text not available from this repository. Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1225/708443 AbstractDescription:
In 2007, Bunge, an agribusiness company, had over $26 billion in worldwide sales and was considered, along with Cargill and Archer Daniels Midland (ADM), one of three very integrated worldwide agribusiness companies. Headquartered in White Plains, NY, the company has traditionally possessed a strong presence in Brazil. Describes Bunge's tradeoff between efficiency of global operations and local responsiveness in an uncertain business environment. New world developments were effecting Bunge directly: high oil prices, a growing demand in emerging economies like China and India, and the possibility of agribusiness companies competing successfully in the production of biofuels. Bunge had traditionally followed an organizational model that was integrated but decentralized, trying to strike a balance between the efficiency of a global entity and the speed of local businesses. What would be the best strategy for Bunge to respond to the external changes imposed by high energy prices and increasing demand from emerging economies? How aggressively should Bunge invest in the rising biofuels markets?
Learning Objective:
To discuss a company's tradeoff between efficiency of global operations and local responsiveness in an uncertain business environment.
Setting:
Global; Agribusiness; $26 billion revenues; 22,000 employees; 2007
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