Item type | Current library | Home library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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American University in Dubai | American University in Dubai | Main Collection | HD 2887 .G837 2010 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 5095620 |
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HD 2845 .D66 1987 The firm in society / | HD 2847 .A197 1975 Big business : theoretical and empirical aspects of concentration and mergers in the United Kingdom / | HD 2879 .G556 2012 Global collaboration : intercultural experiences and learning / | HD 2887 .G837 2010 The new multinationals : Spanish firms in a global context / | HD 2891.85 .G55 2005 Global future : the next challenge for Asian business / | HD 2892.45 .S67 2014 Managing organizations in the United Arab Emirates : dynamic characteristics and key economic developments / | HD 2892.45 .Z8 S48 2006 Setting up in the Dubai International Financial Centre / |
"A new breed of multinational companies is reshaping competition in global industries. For most of the 19th and 20th centuries, multinational firms came from the most technologically advanced countries in the world. Over the last two decades, however, new multinational firms from upper-middle-income economies such as Spain, Ireland, Portugal, South Korea or Taiwan, emerging economies like Brazil, Chile, Mexico, China, India or Turkey, developing countries such as Egypt, Indonesia or Thailand, and oil-rich countries like the United Arab Emirates, Nigeria, Russia or Venezuela have become formidable global competitors. These firms do not necessarily possess technological or marketing skills. This disadvantage, however, did not prevent them from expanding around the world. In contrast to the classic multinationals, they found strength in their ability to organize, manage, execute, and network. They pursued a variety of strategies of vertical integration, product diversification, learning by doing, exploration of new capabilities, and collaboration with other firms. This book documents the dimensions of this phenomenon, identifies the key capabilities of the new multinationals, and provides a new conceptual framework to understand its causes and implications"-- Provided by publisher.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [205]-214) and index.
Machine generated contents note: List of figures; List of tables; 1. The new multinationals; 2. Traditional and new multinationals; 3. Diversification and vertical integration in traditional industries; 4. Market access and technology in durable consumer goods; 5. Serving global customers in producer goods; 6. Learning by doing in infrastructure and financial services; 7. Competing in hard and soft services; 8. Toward a new theory of the multinational enterprise; Bibliography; Index.
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