RecensionsBook Reviews

Multinational Enterprises and Host Country Development, Edited by Holger Görg (2016) Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Company, volume 53, 388 pages. ISBN: 978-981-4749-22-0[Record]

  • Sondes Turki

…more information

  • Sondes Turki
    Candidate au doctorat et chargée de cours, École de relations industrielles, Université de Montréal

This book is a collection of 18 articles co-authored by its editor, Holger Görg. The purpose of the book is to investigate and analyze the effects of multinational companies (MNCs) on their host countries. Based on several empirical studies, the book concludes that MNCs bring many benefits to these countries. To reach this conclusion, the author structured his thinking around three core components, each representing a main part of the book. Part I consists of seven papers and compares MNCs and domestic firms in terms of productivity, technology, wages, research and development (R and D), access to finance and innovation. This part argues that MNCs have “superior characteristics” compared to domestic firms. The first three chapters are related. They show that ownership change within a firm (acquisition of a domestic establishment by a foreign MNC) has positive impacts on productivity (Ch. 1) and on both skilled and unskilled workers’ wages (Ch. 2). The positive effect on wages is explained by the provision of on-the-job training by MNCs, since training is a required knowledge to implement technologies available within the firm (Ch. 3). Chapters 4 and 5 focus on the effect of foreign acquisition on technology. Using R and D expenditure by MNCs (Ch. 4) and innovation output (Ch. 5) as proxy for technology, these two studies show that foreign ownership is positively related to the use of technology. In addition, foreign acquisition is positively related to plant survival and employment growth only if the firm is an exporter (Ch. 7). However, when comparing foreign-owned and domestic firms, the author argues that MNCs seem to create more permanent jobs on the one hand, but have higher exit probability than domestic firms in the host country on the other (Ch. 6). The first part concludes that MNCs have “firm specific assets” that translate into a productivity advantage and which enables them to be “better” than domestic firms. While Part I investigates the direct effects of MNCs on host countries, Part II, consisting of 5 papers, investigates the indirect effects of MNCs on domestic firms within their country. Specifically, the author examines the productivity spillovers toward domestic firms following the presence of MNCs in a host country. Based on a meta-analysis of studies on the relationship between MNCs and productivity spillovers, the author concludes that the empirical methods used influence the results (Ch. 8). In fact, compared to cross-sectional data, panel data help to control for unobserved variables (e.g. industry or firm characteristics) and lead to more robust results. From a literature review, the author claims that the link between MNC presence and higher productivity in host countries relates to backward linkages and spillover channels (imitation, skills acquisition, competition and exports). He also suggests studying spillover effects, not only in firms within the same industry, but in different industries vertically linked to the MNC (Ch. 9). Empirical results show that productivity spillovers are generated only by domestic-market oriented MNCs (Ch. 10) and that spillovers toward domestic firms from backward linkages of MNCs depend on how those linkages are measured (Ch. 11). In fact, the effect of MNCs vary with the level of foreign presence within a cluster (Ch. 12). In addition to asserting that spillover channels are under-explored in empirical studies, Part III investigates some of the mechanisms by which the productivity spillovers of MNCs on domestic firms in the host country take place. The author shows that the mobility of workers from a foreign owned firm to a domestic firm is a mechanism that leads to more productivity for domestic firms in the host country (Ch. 13). Government subsidies are also positively …