Nottingham Centre for Research on
Globalisation and Economic Policy (GEP)

GEP Research Paper 09/27

 

Why are Multinationals “Footloose”?

 

Tomohiko Inui, Richard Kneller, Toshiyuki Matsuura and Danny McGowan

Summary

Multinational ownership often raises the probability a plant will die. We find that this is attributable to multinationals closing small, low capital intensive and downstream plants.

 

Abstract

 

This paper investigates why multinational ownership is found to increase the probability that a plant will exit. It does so by using Japanese plant data linked to firm data. Plants belonging to a multinational are 9 percentage points more likely to exit when plant, firm and industry characteristics are conditioned on. We find that the “footloose” effect is attributable to multinationals closing their weakest plants. Plants that are small, capital un-intensive and have low input intensities relative to the firm are more vulnerable to closure within multinationals. We also find a strong similarity between the plants that are shut by multiplant firms regardless of whether they have overseas affiliates or not.

 

Issued in November 2009

 

This paper is available in PDF format

 

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