Discriminating among Alternative Theories of the Multinational Enterprise.
Recent theoretical developments have incorporated endogenous multinational firms into the general-equilibrium model of trade. One simple taxonomy separates the theory into "vertical" models, in which firms geographically separate activities by stages of production, and "horizontal" models, in which multiplant firms duplicate roughly the same activities in many countries. The authors nest a horizontal and a vertical model within a hybrid (unrestricted) "knowledge-capital model" and estimate the specifications with data on US foreign direct investment activity. In the nested econometric tests, the data sample cannot distinguish statistically between the unrestricted model and the restricted horizontal model, indicating that the latter captures virtually all of the determinants of FDI. The tests overwhelmingly reject the vertical model. Copyright 2002 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
Year of publication: |
2002
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Authors: | Markusen, James R ; Maskus, Keith E |
Published in: |
Review of International Economics. - Wiley Blackwell, ISSN 0965-7576. - Vol. 10.2002, 4, p. 694-707
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Publisher: |
Wiley Blackwell |
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