Noticia actualizada el 27-04-2012
Call for Papers: Foreign Multinationals in Emerging Markets since the 19th Century
• November 2-3, 2012
• Workshop and the GHI
• Conveners: Matthias Kipping (Schulich School of Business, Toronto) and Christina Lubinski (GHI)
• Abstract: 1 June 2012, with invitations to
be sent out by 1 July 2012.
• Full papers: or longer abstracts are due by 1 October 2012.
Download CfP in pdf format
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The purpose of this workshop is to provide historical perspectives on
the operations of multinationals in emerging markets, which present
significant opportunities but also a range of serious challenges for
foreign investors. The intention is to provide some general insights
about how these multinationals managed to adapt to these conditions
and establish a successful and lasting presence in these markets.
Much public and scholarly attention has recently been paid to what
Goldman Sachs analyst Jim O'Neill in a 2001 paper referred to as the
BRICs - Brazil, Russia, India and China - and more generally to a
number of emerging economies, which are now also seen to include South
Korea and South Africa or even Africa as a whole. These countries are
seen as providing enormous potential in terms of growing consumer
demand, but also presenting a number of challenges including weakly
developed institutional frameworks (notably in terms of property
rights or corruption for instance), interventionist, sometimes
unstable governments, and local competitors seeking access to foreign
technology and capital, enabling them not only to compete in their own
markets but also abroad. The question then becomes how multinationals
from the more developed countries can benefit from the potential of
the emerging markets - rather than simply using them as source of raw
material or cheap labour, while managing or at least mitigating the
corresponding risks.
This situation and the resulting question are not new. Many countries
at different times were emerging economies according to the criteria
above, attracting (sometimes substantial) foreign direct investments.
Suffice to point to the case of Singer, which created and dominated
the market for sewing machines in pre-revolutionary Russia, or
Unilever, which generated substantial profits from markets like
Brazil, India and South Africa during the 1960s and 1970s - a period
marked in all these countries by nationalistic government policies,
including import substitution and ownership restrictions.
We look for papers that move beyond the current context - too often
(wrongly) presented as unique and unprecedented - and examine (i) the
motivations for foreign firms to invest in emerging economies, (ii)
the variety of ways in which they overcame the associated challenges,
as well as (iii) the results (positive or negative) of their
investments for themselves and, possibly, the host economy. Both
empirical and conceptual papers are welcome.
Those interested should send an abstract of 1.000 - 1.500 words and a
one-page CV to Susanne Fabricius (fabricius ghi-dc.org) by 1 June 2012, with invitations to
be sent out by 1 July 2012. Full papers or longer abstracts are due by 1 October 2012. |