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Minoritynationals: An empirical analysis of the concentration of geographic sales expansion in MNCs

Cormac Mullen (School of Business, Trinity College Dublin, The University of Dublin, Dublin, Ireland)
Jenny Berrill (School of Business, Trinity College Dublin, The University of Dublin, Dublin, Ireland)

Multinational Business Review

ISSN: 1525-383X

Article publication date: 16 November 2015

234

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to conduct a longitudinal analysis of the patterns of internationalisation of multinational corporations and provide a measure of their degree of globalisation at the firm-level. There is much debate in the literature on the regional nature of the globalisation of multinational corporations (Rugman and Oh, 2013).

Design/methodology/approach

The authors use firm-level sales data to analyse the location of sales and patterns of globalisation of 1,276 companies across ten countries and ten industries from 1998-2012.

Findings

The results show that while international sales are rising and the proportion of home region-oriented firms is falling, the majority of sales of the companies in our data set continues to be in the Triad, with little growth in non-Triad regions. The authors find one common theme for the majority of countries, an increase in sales to Asia yet concentrated in just four industries, financials, basic materials, oil and gas and technology. Despite an increase in the percentage of host-region, bi-regional and global companies, 62.6 per cent of the firms have not changed multinational classification over the 15-year period, 43.1 per cent have not expanded out of their home region and 16.4 per cent have not expanded out of their home market. The authors find some evidence of liabilities of interregional foreignness at the industry and country level. The authors show regional sales are moving towards matching global economic activity for the 50 most globalised firms in our study but less so for the other firms in our sample. Overall, the results show that the majority of the growth in internationalisation comes from a small minority of firms.

Originality/value

The authors make several advances across the literature on internationalisation, including a more in-depth longitudinal analysis of firm-level multinationality than exists to date and a novel method of measuring firm-level globalisation.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

A previous version of this paper was presented at the Reading-UNCTAD International Business Conference at the Henley Business School, University of Reading, June 2015. The authors are grateful to many conference participants for their feedback, the editors and to two anonymous referees for their insightful comments.

Citation

Mullen, C. and Berrill, J. (2015), "Minoritynationals: An empirical analysis of the concentration of geographic sales expansion in MNCs", Multinational Business Review, Vol. 23 No. 4, pp. 277-305. https://doi.org/10.1108/MBR-04-2015-0014

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2015, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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