The political economy of global firms from India and China |
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Authors: | Lawrence Sáez Crystal Chang |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Oriental and African Studies , UK;2. University of California , Berkeley, USA |
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Abstract: | This article attempts to build a bridge between contemporary studies of global firms from emerging economies and existing theories in comparative political economy. It argues that given the primacy of the state as an economic actor in developing countries, the variety of capitalism literature could provide a theoretical foundation for firm-level analyses of emerging market multinationals. For example, the authors suggest that China and India may be moving towards a ‘hybrid market economy’. They also offer a typology of Indian and Chinese corporates to demonstrate an empirical approach to analysing domestic business–government relationships and the ways in which these firms are shaped by the peculiarities of their respective institutional setting. Finally, they identify some of the likely pitfalls of doing cross-national comparisons of emerging market multinationals, particularly with respect to the reliability of corporate data. |
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Keywords: | China India varieties of capitalism multinationals comparative political economy |
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