This study analyses the causes of British manufacturing investment overseas, focusing primarily on the period from the mid 1960s to the mid 1980s. During these years there were significant changes in UK direct investment and this book represented the first major analysis of these changes based on detailed case studies of British international firms. The early chapters assess the available statistical evidence and the theories of overseas investment that had hitherto been put forward. The authors emphasize the need for recognizing the dynamic and varied nature of firms and the relevance of their historical development in order to understand business decision-making. Through a detailed consideration of the activities of a large sample of companies, the book explains why they manufacture abroad and assesses the overall consequences for the British economy of its overseas investment.
David Shepherd (Author) , Aubrey Silberston (Author) , Roger Strange (Author)
List of Tables, figures. Preface. 1. Preliminary Remarks. 2. Overseas Investment: Statistical Background. 3. Overseas Investment: Analytical Background. 4. Historical Developments in Overseas Investment. 5. The Sample of Firms. 6. Why Do Some Firms Manufacture Overseas? Some Preliminary Evidence 7. Why Do Firms Manufacture Overseas? Evidence from the Case Studies. 8. Concluding Comments on Overseas Manufacturing Investment. References. Index.
Catriona Kelly, David Shepherd, Oxford) Kelly, Catriona (Reader in Russian and Fellow, Reader in Russian and Fellow, New College, University of Sheffield) Shepherd, David (Professor of Russian, founder and Director of the Bakhtin Centre, Professor of Russian, founder and Director of the Bakhtin Centre
Catriona Kelly, David Shepherd, Oxford) Kelly, Catriona (Lecturer in Russian, Lecturer in Russian, New College, University of Sheffield) Shepherd, David (Professor of Russian, Professor of Russian
Pervez Ghauri, Kjell Grønhaug, Roger Strange, Kjell Grønhaug, Pervez (University of Birmingham) Ghauri, Bergen-Sandviken) Grønhaug, Kjell (Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration, Roger (University of Sussex) Strange