Restructuring economies in Latin America, Eastern Europe, and
elsewhere are abandoning their hostility to foreign enterprises and
adopting policies to attract international investment. This book
examines corporate experiences in Chile, one of the first nations
to move successfully from a statist economy to an open market
system using privatization, debt conversion, and liberal trade and
investment policies. Drawing from research on over seventy foreign
corporations, the book compares investment strategies used to
assess risk and exploit business opportunities under conditions of
fundamental economic change. Case studies describe how and why
firms selected different financing, management, employment,
production, and marketing approaches in establishing or expanding
their operations.
After a brief historical review, the book examines key policy
decisions in the 1980s that shaped Chile's new economy. Case
studies are then analyzed by sector, covering mining and energy,
nontraditional exports (forestry, fishing, and agribusiness),
banking and insurance, and other industries including computers,
telecommunications, chemicals, electrical goods, automotive
products, foods and beverages, and pharmaceuticals. Summary
chapters relate these learning experiences to broader strategic
issues such as ownership and control, financing methods, technology
transfer, trade policy, labor relations, taxation, regulatory
reform, and coordinating global corporate operations. This book
presents cumulative learning experiences useful for business
executives and public officials who must develop new foreign
investment strategies, as well as scholars and students interested
in the role of foreign investment in developing countries.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!