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Multinational enterprises have increasingly sought to organise
their activities internationally in order to achieve greater
efficiency and better optimisation of their market share and rent
generation. However, MNEs do not regard all locations as being
equivalent. Smaller economies and less-developed countries are not
as attractive because of their limited market size, under-developed
location advantages or their lack of proximity to other locations.
This book focuses on how MNE activity both to and from peripheral
economies differs from MNEs associated with "core" economies.
Multinational enterprises do not regard all locations as being equivalent. Smaller economies and less-developed countries are not as attractive because of a limited market size or lack of proximity to other locations. This book focuses on how multinational activity to and from peripheral economies differs from their activity in core economies.
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