Divide and Rule: Geographical Diversification and the Multinational Firm
We develop a model to illustrate a motive for FDI that derives from a firm's overall locational strategy. A firm, that initially has a plant in its home country, may choose to also have a foreign plant in order to improve its bargaining position versus local labour unions. This permits the firm to reduce wages. Furthermore, the existence of a second foreign plant acts to discipline the demands of foreign workers. Thus, the firm is faced with a link between the wage and its degree of geographical diversification. This drives up the number of plants the firm has in equilibrium.
Year of publication: |
2004
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Authors: | Leahy, Dermot ; Pavelin, Stephen |
Published in: |
Open Economies Review. - Springer. - Vol. 15.2004, 4, p. 363-374
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Publisher: |
Springer |
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