外商直接投资
跨国公司
互补性(分子生物学)
杠杆(统计)
奖学金
范围(计算机科学)
国际商务
经济影响分析
经济
经济体制
业务
政治学
经济增长
宏观经济学
机器学习
生物
遗传学
微观经济学
管理
程序设计语言
计算机科学
财务
作者
Yannick T. Wiessner,Elisa Giuliani,Frank Wijen,Jonathan P. Doh
标识
DOI:10.1057/s41267-023-00636-9
摘要
Abstract Societal actors increasingly expect multinational enterprises (MNEs) to positively impact the host countries in which they operate. While these expectations have prompted IB scholars to engage more extensively with the societal impacts of foreign direct investment (FDI), our collective knowledge of these impacts is limited. Early IB literature investigated FDI’s aggregate impact but generally confined the scope to economic effects. Contemporary, strategy-oriented IB scholarship broadened the scope of impact types to include social and ecological effects, yet mostly limited the scope of the impacted actors to MNEs themselves. We argue that IB research should more comprehensively assess FDI’s impact by incorporating social and ecological effects in addition to economic ones, and by accounting for a broader set of stakeholders beyond MNEs. IB scholars should challenge the assumption that FDI’s economic impacts spill over to positive societal outcomes, and that MNEs’ interests parallel those of host countries. A more comprehensive assessment will require IB scholars to question “win–win” assumptions about the complementarity of corporate societal and financial performance, examine FDI’s societal impact over longer time horizons, leverage innovative approaches from allied sciences, and consider interactions between different types of societal effects in order to appreciate their sometimes countervailing effects.
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