26 research outputs found

    Greenfield or Acquisition Entry: A Review of the Empirical Foreign Establishment Mode Literature

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    This paper reviews the empirical literature on the determinants of the choice by multinational enterprises between entering foreign countries through greenfields or acquisitions. We discuss and compare the main theoretical perspectives used, provide a detailed overview of the empirical findings, examine why these findings have often been inconsistent, and offer theoretical and methodological suggestions to guide future research

    The transaction cost of equity joint ventures: Past, present and future

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    Leveraging Asian institutions to deepen theory: A transaction cost perspective on relational governance

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    Is guanxi China-specific? Will it wane as China develops? I look at guanxi as a relation-based way to enforce transactions, and argue that it is a type of external hybrid used whenever the output constraints of market transactions must be supplemented by some behavior constraints. Drawing on transaction cost and network theories and on the new institutional economics and private ordering literatures, I specify the advantages and drawbacks of guanxi. I conclude that it is not China-specific and that it will survive further improvements in Chinese market and judicial institutions, although its scope will be somewhat reduced

    Why and how FDI stocks are a biased measure of MNE affiliate activity

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    Many international business (IB) studies have used foreign direct investment (FDI) stocks to measure the aggregate value-adding activity of multinational enterprises (MNE) affiliates in host countries. We argue that FDI stocks are a biased measure of that activity, because the degree to which they overestimate or underestimate affiliate activity varies systematically with host-country characteristics. First, most FDI into countries that serve as tax havens generate no actual productive activity; thus FDI stocks in such countries overestimate affiliate activity. Second, FDI stocks do not include locally raised external funds, funds widely used in countries with well-developed financial markets or volatile exchange rates, resulting in an underestimation of affiliate activity in such countries. Finally, the extent to which FDI translates into affiliate activity increases with affiliate labor productivity, so in countries where labor is more productive, FDI stocks also result in an underestimation of affiliate activity. We test these hypotheses by first regressing affiliate value-added and affiliate sales on FDI stocks to calculate a country-specific mismatch, and then by regressing this mismatch on a host country's tax haven status, level of financial market development, exchange rate volatility, and affiliate labor productivity. All hypotheses are supported, implying that FDI stocks are a biased measure of MNE affiliate activity, and hence that the results of FDI-data-based studies of such activity need to be reconsidered
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