January 2001
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280 Reads
·
114 Citations
Transnational Corporations
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January 2001
·
280 Reads
·
114 Citations
Transnational Corporations
January 2001
·
240 Reads
·
31 Citations
Multinational Business Review
... Moreover, crops provide vegetation that converts carbon dioxide to oxygen through photosynthesis thereby reducing greenhouse gases and the effect of global warming [17,18]. Some developed countries have been observed to be in stages I, II, and III, contrary to the theoretical stages IV and V [19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30]. Djokoto's study [28] explained that " […] with significant growth in the ownership and location advantages. ...
January 2001
Transnational Corporations
... In this context, it is argued that the observed phenomenon of Spanish mul� na� onals corresponds to the latest studies on the focus of interna� onaliza� on of MNEs, which indicate that modern company is "semi global" (e.g., Osegowitsch & Sammar� no, 2008;Asmussen, 2009;Banalieva & Eddleston, 2011). Given this, the fi rst hypothesis of this paper is formulated as follows: Prior experience in foreign markets, especially of mul� na� onal nature (Durán & Ubeda, 2001), not only generates a greater capacity for evalua� ng the advantages of localiza� on off ered by culturally distant countries (Erramilli, 1991), but it provides access to poten� al effi ciency gains through a greater capacity of coordina� on of its interna� onal opera� ons (Durán, 2002). ...
January 2001
Multinational Business Review