Flying geese or sitting ducks? Transnationals and industry in developing countries

Includes bibliography

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Autor principal: Mortimore, Michael
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2014
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/10462
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spelling oai-11362-104622020-11-25T22:58:09Z Flying geese or sitting ducks? Transnationals and industry in developing countries Mortimore, Michael COMPETENCIA EMPRESAS TRANSNACIONALES INNOVACIONES INVERSIONES EXTRANJERAS INVERSIONES PAISES EN DESARROLLO PRODUCTIVIDAD SUSTITUCION DE IMPORTACIONES TRANSFERENCIA DE TECNOLOGIA COMPETITION DEVELOPING COUNTRIES FOREIGN INVESTMENTS IMPORT SUBSTITUTION INNOVATIONS INVESTMENTS PRODUCTIVITY TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS Includes bibliography The constitution of a new international industrial order dominated by a core of large transnational corporations generally makes life more difficult for the great majority of developing countries because, since most are not in a position to compete effectively, they face still greater marginalization. TNCS more than ever before can significantly influence the international competitiveness and therefore the nature of incorporation of developing countries into the new increasingly integrated international production system. The national origin and form of foreign direct investment and technology are very important factors in accounting for the kind of impact TNCS have on local industry. The experience of some of the newly industrializing countries of developing Asia suggests that the more dynamic Japanese FDI and technology which comes in the form of minority capital or non-equity participation in local firms has been a very important element in improving the international competitiveness of those countries and ensuring the continuous technological upgrading of their industry. The Latin American experience with the less dynamic United States For and technology, which normally came in the form of the establishment of subsidiaries or majority-owned affiliates, has been that this has tended to reinforce the bias towards inward-looking industrialization by import-substitution and has therefore done little to improve the international competitiveness of Latin American industry, which is thus being progressively marginalized, both from an international and a corporate perspective. 2014-01-02T18:40:58Z 2014-01-02T18:40:58Z 1993-12 Texto Sección o Parte de un Documento http://hdl.handle.net/11362/10462 LC/G.1792-P en CEPAL Review CEPAL Review 51 application/pdf AMERICA LATINA ASIA Y EL PACIFICO ASIA AND THE PACIFIC LATIN AMERICA
institution Cepal
collection Cepal
language English
topic COMPETENCIA
EMPRESAS TRANSNACIONALES
INNOVACIONES
INVERSIONES EXTRANJERAS
INVERSIONES
PAISES EN DESARROLLO
PRODUCTIVIDAD
SUSTITUCION DE IMPORTACIONES
TRANSFERENCIA DE TECNOLOGIA
COMPETITION
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
IMPORT SUBSTITUTION
INNOVATIONS
INVESTMENTS
PRODUCTIVITY
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS
spellingShingle COMPETENCIA
EMPRESAS TRANSNACIONALES
INNOVACIONES
INVERSIONES EXTRANJERAS
INVERSIONES
PAISES EN DESARROLLO
PRODUCTIVIDAD
SUSTITUCION DE IMPORTACIONES
TRANSFERENCIA DE TECNOLOGIA
COMPETITION
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
FOREIGN INVESTMENTS
IMPORT SUBSTITUTION
INNOVATIONS
INVESTMENTS
PRODUCTIVITY
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS
Mortimore, Michael
Flying geese or sitting ducks? Transnationals and industry in developing countries
description Includes bibliography
format Texto
author Mortimore, Michael
author_facet Mortimore, Michael
author_sort Mortimore, Michael
title Flying geese or sitting ducks? Transnationals and industry in developing countries
title_short Flying geese or sitting ducks? Transnationals and industry in developing countries
title_full Flying geese or sitting ducks? Transnationals and industry in developing countries
title_fullStr Flying geese or sitting ducks? Transnationals and industry in developing countries
title_full_unstemmed Flying geese or sitting ducks? Transnationals and industry in developing countries
title_sort flying geese or sitting ducks? transnationals and industry in developing countries
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/10462
work_keys_str_mv AT mortimoremichael flyinggeeseorsittingduckstransnationalsandindustryindevelopingcountries
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