Lecture 11 & 12 - Multinational Enterprises (MNEs)
1. Introduction: Multinational Enterprises in the Global Economy
Multinational enterprises (MNEs) are among the most important actors in the modern global economy. Rather than viewing international trade purely as exchanges between independent national firms, contemporary international economics recognises that a substantial share of global production, trade, and innovation occurs within the boundaries of multinational firms.
MNEs organise production across multiple countries, allocating different stages of the value chain according to cost, productivity, and strategic considerations. This organisation has profound implications for international trade patterns, productivity, innovation networks, and the global distribution of economic activity.
A Multinational Enterprise (MNE) is a firm that operates production or service facilities in more than one country and is coordinated by a central headquarters located in a home country.
2. The Global Importance of Multinational Firms
MNEs dominate large segments of global economic activity. Their scale and reach mean that international production networks are increasingly organised within firms rather than through arm’s-length trade between separate companies.
Key stylised facts illustrate their significance:
- Value added produced by MNEs accounts for roughly one quarter of world GDP
- Around 20–25% of employment in developed economies is linked to MNEs
- Approximately 90% of US exports and imports occur through multinational firms
- Roughly one third of global trade is intra-firm trade
- About 70% of global business R&D is produced by the largest multinationals
These figures demonstrate that MNEs act as organisers of international production, rather than simply participants in trade.
Traditional trade theory assumes independent firms exporting goods across borders. In reality, many goods cross borders multiple times within the same firm’s production network. A smartphone, for instance, may involve design in the United States, chip manufacturing in Taiwan, assembly in China, and marketing globally.
3. What Defines a Multinational Firm?
A multinational enterprise typically consists of two main organisational units:
-
Parent company (Headquarters)
The main legal entity that owns and coordinates global operations. -
Subsidiaries or affiliates
Firms located abroad that are owned or controlled by the parent company.
These subsidiaries may undertake a variety of functions including production, distribution, research, or assembly.
It is important to distinguish MNE activity from foreign direct investment (FDI).
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) refers to long-term investment by a firm in productive assets located in another country, typically involving ownership or control.
Key distinctions:
| Concept | Meaning |
|---|---|
| MNE | The firm operating internationally |
| FDI | The investment mechanism used to establish foreign operations |
FDI may occur without managerial control (minority stakes), whereas MNEs involve organisational control of foreign operations.
4. The Scale of Global Corporations
This figure illustrates the foreign sales share of the largest multinational firms. Firms such as General Electric, ExxonMobil, Toyota, and Nestlé derive a substantial proportion of their revenue from international markets.
The chart highlights two central features of multinational activity:
-
Global revenue distribution
Major firms generate a large portion of sales outside their home countries. -
International production networks
Rather than exporting everything from the home country, firms often produce directly within foreign markets.
The presence of large foreign sales shares suggests that firms face strong incentives to establish local production rather than relying solely on exports. These incentives arise due to trade costs, market access considerations, and supply chain optimisation.
This slide shows how the composition of the world’s largest firms has evolved over time. Technology companies such as Apple, Google, Microsoft, Amazon, and Tencent now dominate global rankings.
This reflects a shift toward:
- Digital platforms
- intangible capital
- global technology networks
The rise of tech firms highlights the increasing importance of knowledge-based assets such as software, intellectual property, and data.
The Fortune Global 500 list demonstrates that multinational firms collectively generate enormous revenues exceeding tens of trillions of dollars annually.
The persistence of certain firms at the top (for example Walmart) reflects the growing phenomenon of “superstar firms” with massive global reach.
Key features of large multinationals:
- Global sales networks
- Large internal production chains
- Dominance in R&D and innovation
- Significant market concentration
5. Types of Multinational Activity
Multinational investment can take different organisational forms depending on strategic goals.
5.1 Greenfield Investment vs Mergers & Acquisitions
Two primary ways firms establish foreign operations:
Greenfield investment
- Creating a new subsidiary from scratch
- Building factories, infrastructure, and operations abroad
Mergers and acquisitions (M&A)
- Purchasing an existing foreign firm
- Immediate entry into the host market
Greenfield investments generally involve larger capital expenditures but allow firms to design operations optimally.
5.2 Horizontal vs Vertical Multinationals
A second classification concerns the structure of production across countries.
Horizontal MNEs
Firms replicate the same production activities in multiple countries.
Example:
- Toyota producing cars in Japan, the US, and the UK.
Purpose:
- Serve foreign markets locally
- Avoid trade costs
Vertical MNEs
Firms locate different stages of production in different countries.
Examples include:
- Component manufacturing in one country
- Assembly in another
- Design or R&D elsewhere
Two forms:
Backward vertical integration
- Subsidiary supplies inputs to the parent company.
Forward vertical integration
- Parent supplies inputs to the subsidiary.
6. Stylised Facts About Multinationals
6.1 Geographic Distribution of MNE Activity
The scatter plots show that multinational activity is heavily concentrated among high-income economies.
This reflects several structural factors:
- large market size
- developed institutions
- skilled labour availability
- advanced infrastructure
Consequently, most multinational activity occurs between developed economies, rather than between developed and developing countries.
This figure shows the distribution of US multinational affiliate employment across host country income groups.
Historically, the majority of employment was located in high-income countries, although the share in middle-income countries has increased gradually.
This indicates a slow shift toward emerging markets as global production locations.
6.2 MNEs Are More Productive Than Domestic Firms
The table shows the share of US economic activity generated by multinational parent firms.
Despite representing a small fraction of firms, multinationals account for disproportionately large shares of:
- value added
- employment
- R&D expenditure
- exports
This reflects the fact that multinational firms tend to be large, productive, and innovation-intensive.
This graph illustrates the share of business R&D in the United States performed by multinational firms.
The share consistently exceeds 70%, indicating that innovation is highly concentrated within multinational corporations.
The figure summarises the role of multinational firms in US economic activity.
Multinationals account for large proportions of:
- manufacturing employment
- capital expenditure
- R&D spending
- exports
When discussing MNEs in essays, emphasise the empirical pattern that a small number of large firms dominate international trade and innovation.
6.3 The Rise of Superstar Firms
This figure illustrates the increasing concentration of economic activity among the largest global firms.
Sales among the top firms have grown dramatically over time, a phenomenon often referred to as the “superstar firm” effect.
Possible explanations include:
- global market integration
- economies of scale in digital industries
- network effects
- intellectual property advantages
7. Why Do Multinationals Exist? — The OLI Framework
The most influential explanation of multinational activity is the OLI framework, developed by Stephen Hymer.
It proposes that firms become multinational when three conditions hold:
- Ownership advantages
- Location advantages
- Internalisation advantages
7.1 Ownership Advantages
Ownership advantages refer to firm-specific assets that allow companies to compete successfully abroad.
Examples include:
- proprietary technology
- brand reputation
- intellectual property
- organisational capabilities
These assets allow firms to overcome the disadvantages of operating in foreign markets.
Management practices also constitute a critical ownership advantage.
Research shows that multinational firms often implement superior organisational structures and performance management systems, which enhance productivity across subsidiaries.
7.2 Location Advantages
Location advantages arise when specific countries offer favourable conditions for production.
Examples include:
- lower labour costs
- proximity to markets
- favourable tax regimes
- access to natural resources
Tax optimisation is also an important factor, as multinational firms may structure operations to shift profits toward low-tax jurisdictions.
7.3 Internalisation Advantages
Internalisation refers to the decision to conduct transactions within the firm rather than through external markets.
This occurs when markets fail to efficiently coordinate transactions due to:
- intellectual property risks
- quality control problems
- contract enforcement difficulties
- coordination failures
Internalisation theory argues that firms expand boundaries when market transactions become inefficient. By bringing activities inside the firm, management authority replaces contractual negotiation.
8. Horizontal Multinationals and the Proximity–Concentration Trade-off
Horizontal multinational activity involves replicating production across countries.
The key theoretical framework explaining this behaviour is the proximity-concentration trade-off.
Two competing forces influence firm decisions:
Proximity Benefits
Producing close to consumers reduces:
- transport costs
- tariffs
- delivery time
Concentration Benefits
Producing in one location reduces:
- fixed production costs
- duplication of facilities
Firms must choose between exporting from a central plant or building factories abroad. If trade costs are high and markets are large, foreign production becomes more attractive.
9. Trade Policy and Multinational Supply Chains
The Washing Machine Tariffs Case
This figure illustrates the effects of US anti-dumping measures against washing machine imports.
Imports from targeted countries fell sharply after tariffs were imposed. However, imports from other countries increased as firms reorganised supply chains.
The data reveal that production shifted toward new manufacturing locations such as Vietnam and Thailand.
This demonstrates how multinational firms reallocate production geographically in response to trade policy changes.
The cartoon highlights a central insight: tariffs often impose costs on domestic consumers.
Empirical estimates suggest the tariff policy increased consumer costs by roughly $1.5 billion annually, illustrating that protectionist policies may generate significant welfare losses.
10. Multinationals and Brexit
The Brexit referendum introduced uncertainty regarding the UK's access to the EU single market.
As a result, firms anticipated potential trade barriers and responded strategically.
Researchers analysed multinational investment using detailed datasets on FDI transactions.
They applied the synthetic control method, which constructs a counterfactual scenario representing what UK investment flows would have looked like without Brexit.
The results show a 17% increase in outward investment from UK firms into EU countries.
This suggests firms relocated operations inside the EU to maintain market access.
Brexit provides a clear empirical example of how firms use multinational investment to circumvent new trade barriers.
11. Vertical Multinationals and Global Value Chains
Vertical MNEs fragment production across countries according to comparative advantage.
However, empirical evidence reveals that:
- most FDI still occurs between developed countries
- many subsidiaries produce primarily for local markets rather than exporting back to the parent
This suggests multinational production often serves market access motives rather than purely cost-saving motives.
12. The “Great Reallocation” of Global Supply Chains
Recent geopolitical tensions and supply chain vulnerabilities have triggered a restructuring of global production networks.
The United States has reduced dependence on Chinese imports, shifting production toward alternative locations.
Key trends include:
- Nearshoring to Mexico
- Friendshoring to politically aligned economies
- relocation toward Southeast Asia (e.g. Vietnam)
This chart shows changes in US import market shares between 2017 and 2022.
Countries such as Vietnam gained market share, while China experienced substantial declines.
The “great reallocation” reflects:
- geopolitical risk management
- supply chain diversification
- trade policy tensions
13. Multinationals and Innovation
Multinational firms play a major role in global R&D networks.
Reasons include:
- access to specialised talent
- proximity to research clusters
- differences in labour costs
- immigration restrictions affecting skilled workers
Increasingly, firms establish R&D subsidiaries abroad to access global pools of human capital.
14. Contractual Theories of the Firm
Organisational theories explain why firms internalise transactions.
Under perfect contracts, firm boundaries would be irrelevant.
However, real-world contracts are incomplete.
Key issues include:
- unforeseen contingencies
- costly monitoring
- asymmetric information
Transaction cost theory (Williamson) argues that firms exist because hierarchical authority can resolve conflicts more efficiently than markets.
Do not assume firms always internalise production to reduce costs. Internalisation occurs primarily when market transactions are inefficient due to contractual frictions.
15. Empirical Evidence on Multinational Integration
Empirical research finds that multinational integration is more likely when:
- products are technologically complex
- inputs are relationship-specific
- contracts are difficult to enforce
More productive firms are also more likely to become multinationals because:
- international operations involve large fixed costs
- internal supply chains require managerial capability
16. Productivity Spillovers from Multinationals
Multinationals can generate positive spillovers for domestic firms.
Mechanisms include:
- technology diffusion
- worker mobility
- supplier linkages
- competitive pressure
Domestic firms may improve productivity by learning from multinational practices.
Core insights about multinational firms:
- MNEs dominate global trade and innovation
- Their existence is explained by ownership, location, and internalisation advantages
- Trade policy and geopolitical shocks reshape global supply chains
- Multinationals drive productivity growth and technological diffusion
Bibliography
Alfaro, L. and Chor, D. (2023) Global supply chains: The looming “great reallocation”. National Bureau of Economic Research.
Antràs, P. and Melitz, M. (2013) Global production: Firms, contracts, and trade structure.
Antràs, P. and Yeaple, S. (2014) Multinational firms and the structure of international trade. Handbook of International Economics.
Atalay, E., Hortaçsu, A., Roberts, J. and Syverson, C. (2019) Network structure of production.
Bloom, N., Sadun, R. and Van Reenen, J. (2019) Management practices across firms and countries.
Branstetter, L., Glennon, B. and Jensen, J. (2021) The new global invention machine.
Breinlich, H., Leromain, E., Novy, D. and Sampson, T. (2020) Voting with their money: Brexit and outward investment by UK firms. European Economic Review.
Flaaen, A., Hortaçsu, A. and Tintelnot, F. (2020) The production relocation and price effects of US trade policy: The case of washing machines. American Economic Review.
Sutton, J. (2003) Market structure and productivity spillovers.
Williamson, O. (1985) The economic institutions of capitalism.



















