Nationality and multinationals in historical perspective
Nationality and multinationals in historical perspective
6 min read
Rate this book:
About This Book
This paper provides a historical perspective to current debates whether large global firms are becoming "stateless." Robert Reich among others suggested that historically the nationality of multinationals was clear, while for contemporary multinationals corporate nationality is both unclear and increasingly irrelevant. However the historical evidence shows that a great deal of international business in the nineteenth century was not easily fitted into national categories. The place of registration, the nationality of shareholders, and the nationality of management often pointed in different directions. During the twentieth century such cosmopolitan capitalism was replaced by sharper national identities. The interwar disintegration of the international economy also led to the national subsidiaries of multinationals taking on strong local identities. Over the past two decades, as the pace of globalization quickened, ambiguities increased again. Yet in the early twenty first century, ownership, location and geography still mattered enormously in international business. They may matter more than in the past.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Harvard Business School. Division of Research
A survey-based procedure for m
A survey-based procedure for measuring uncertainty or heterogeneous preferences in markets
Accident, intention, and expec
Accident, intention, and expectation in innovation process
Acquisitions and firm growth
Acquisitions and firm growth
Bankers, industrialists, and t
Bankers, industrialists, and their cliques
Behavioral operations
Behavioral operations
Can civil law countries get go
Can civil law countries get good institutions?
View all books by Harvard Business School. Division of Research →