Skip to main content

2018 | Buch

Transformations of Global Prosperity

How Foreign Investment, Multinationals, and Value Chains are Remaking Modern Economy

insite
SUCHEN

Über dieses Buch

This book presents an in-depth understanding of the transformation of modern economy in the twenty-first century by examining the interface and interplay of three key forces of contemporary global economy—Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), Multinational Enterprises (MNEs), and Global Value Chains (GVCs)—and how the emerging nexus of these forces has already ushered in revolutionary transformation in global production, investment, trade, and employment in recent decades.

A distinctive feature of the book is that it situates the contemporary GVC revolution—that envisages fragmentation and dispersion of production processes across the world based on competitive costs and quality—as a natural progression of the traditional FDIs-MNEs nexus, which emphasized internationalization of production and trade in search of profits, resources, markets, or cheap labour. Moreover, the book provides a comprehensive analysis, from historical, theoretical and empirical perspectives, of both traditional FDIs-MNEs Nexus that dominated the world economy until the end of the twentieth century, and of the New Nexus of FDIs-MNEs-GVCs, that has opened grand opportunities for global prosperity by providing short-cut paths to industrialization and economic growth for less developed countries.

As an exemplar, the book examines GVCs in automobiles—a medium-tech manufacturing activity with numerous backward and forward linkages—to demonstrate how the FDI-MNE-GVC interface in this sector has wedged industrialization, employment, and trade in six emerging countries/regions—Brazil, Central and Eastern Europe, China, India, Mexico and Thailand.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter
1. Introduction
Abstract
In recent decades, inexorable forces of economic globalization have been profoundly transforming global patterns of production, investment, trade, and employment, in other words, remaking the world economy once again. Some of the formidable forces that underpin such momentous and transfixing changes, and the consequent transformation in global prosperity, include foreign direct investment (FDI), multinational enterprises (MNEs), and global value chains (GVCs). This book is about these forces, and how they are remaking modern economy in the twenty-first century, and consequently reversing the fortunes of the advanced industrialized economies of the North and the developing and emerging economies of the South.
Caf Dowlah
2. The Traditional Nexus of Multinational Enterprises and Foreign Direct Investment
Abstract
This chapter explains how internationalization of investment and production progressed historically under the traditional nexus of foreign direct investment (FDI), and multinational enterprises (MNEs); how the nexus reached its climax in the post-WWII period under the dominance of vertically organized US based multinationals; how horizontally organized Japanese multinationals challenged that status quo in the 1970s through the 1980s; and how reverse FDI flows from emerging economies have been reshaping the traditional FDI-MNE nexus in recent decades.
Caf Dowlah
3. Theoretical Foundations of Traditional FDI–MNE Nexus
Abstract
This chapter explains how the classical postulations of international capital movement based on interest rate differentials failed to explain the post-WWII experience of capital movement among capital-rich developed countries, instead of capital-scarce developing countries; and how, as a result, beginning from the 1960s, scores of neoclassical theories emerged to predict international movement of capital, international trade, and the phenomenal expansion of multinationals around the world. This chapter also explores the perspectives of developing and transition economies in respect to international capital movement, and the operations of multinational enterprises.
Caf Dowlah
4. The Traditional Nexus of FDI–MNE—Empirical Findings
Abstract
Multinational enterprises (MNEs)—the prime movers of foreign direct investment (FDI)—manage complex global businesses across multiple countries and multiple markets, and thus not only powerfully affect global patterns of investment, production, and trade, but also exert far-reaching influence over host countries. Over the decades, voluminous amount of research considered the consequences of the FDI-MNE nexus on host countries. This chapter considers some of those consequences, especially in the context of host developing countries, by focusing on the effects of FDI-MNE nexus on economic growth and development, transfer of knowledge and technology, and income inequality in these countries.
Caf Dowlah
5. The New Nexus of Foreign Investment, Multinationals, and Global Value Chains
Abstract
This chapter explains how the traditional nexus between foreign direct investment (FDI) and multinational enterprises (MNEs) has paved the way for the emergence of global value chains (GVCs), and how the new nexus among FDIs-MNEs-GVCs and the resultant internationalization of production, investment, and trade have been transforming global economy in the twenty-first century. This chapter provides the conceptual and theoretical context of the GVC phenomenon, examines methodologies of measuring interconnectedness and interdependence of global production and trade under GVCs, and sheds light on the drivers and directions of GVCs in contemporary world economy.
Caf Dowlah
6. Global Value Chains in Automobiles
Abstract
This chapter explores global value chains (GVCs) in automobiles—a producer-driven high and medium-high tech capital-intensive industry with numerous backward and forward linkages for investment, production, trade, and employment—as an exemplar of the GVC revolution in the contemporary global economy. The chapter explains the evolution of the automobile industry, global patterns of assembler-component supplier dynamics, trends in global production and trade in automobiles and auto components, and the transformation of the auto industry under the emerging nexus of foreign direct investment (FDI)-multinational enterprises (MNEs)-GVCs in recent decades.
Caf Dowlah
7. Case Studies on Global Value Chains in Automobiles
Abstract
This chapter provides empirical examples of global value chains (GVCs) in the automobile sector by focusing on six emerging countries/regions—Brazil, Central and Eastern Europe (CEE), China, India, Mexico, and Thailand. Although all are emerging developing countries/regions, the chapter explains how they represent different dynamics in global automobile structure, and how all of them are increasingly being brought under the nexus of foreign direct investment (FDI), multinational enterprises (MNEs), and the GVCs. The automobile GVCs of these countries are examined by focusing on historical background, supply chains, and trends in production and trade of automobiles in each country.
Caf Dowlah
8. The New Nexus and the Emerging Trends in Global Employment and Specialization
Abstract
This chapter explains how the new-fangled configurations of global production, investment, and trade being orchestrated by the new nexus of multinational enterprises (MNEs), foreign direct investment (FDI), and global value chains (GVCs) have been transforming global patterns of employment and specialization in the twenty-first century. The chapter provides conceptual underpinnings and empirical findings on the linkages between trade, investment, and value chains, and identifies the underlying forces and dynamics that are propelling the new trends and patterns of employment and specialization across the world under the new nexus.
Caf Dowlah
9. The New Nexus of FDI–MNEs–GVCs and the Transformation of Global Prosperity
Abstract
This concluding chapter explains how the forces unleashed by the new nexus of the multinational enterprises (MNEs), foreign direct investment (FDI), and global value chains (GVCs) have been shifting the gravity of the world economy towards developing countries, and how, as an inevitable consequence of such forces, the fortunes of the North and the South are being reversed in the twenty-first century.
Caf Dowlah
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Transformations of Global Prosperity
verfasst von
Prof. Caf Dowlah
Copyright-Jahr
2018
Electronic ISBN
978-3-319-71105-8
Print ISBN
978-3-319-71104-1
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-71105-8