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In order to understand international economic regulations, it is essential to understand the variation in competing corporations' interests. This book's theoretical findings open a 'black box' in the literature on international political economy and elucidate a source of regulatory differences and similarities. Its counter-intuitive case studies reveal how business and governments actually interact. By exploring powerful corporations' investment profiles and regulatory strategies, this book explains why globalization sometimes results in a 'race to the bottom', sometimes in higher common regulations, and sometimes in regulations that differ between countries. Uniquely, it then explains which regulatory outcome is likely to occur under specified conditions. The explanation incorporates economics, political science, studies of regulatory capture, and examinations of transaction costs, firms' regulatory strategies, and the roles international institutions.
In order to understand international economic regulations, it is
essential to understand the variation in competing corporations'
interests. Political science theories have neglected the role of
individual firms as causal actors. Theories of institutions have
neglected to examine the creation of business law. Economic
theories have neglected to apply concepts of asset specificity to
social regulations in competitive industries. This book fills these
voids with a company-based explanation. Its theoretical findings
open a 'black box' in the literature on international political
economy and elucidate a source of regulatory differences and
similarities.
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