This book challenges conventional wisdom by revealing an extensive and
heterogeneous community of foreign businesses in Australia before 1914.
Multinational enterprise arrived predominantly from Britain, but other
sender nations included the USA, France, Germany, New Zealand, and
Japan. Their firms spread out across Australia from mining and pastoral
communities, to portside industries and CBD precincts, and they operated
broadly across mining, trading, shipping, insurance, finance, and
manufacturing. They were a remarkably diverse population of firms by
size, organisational form, and longevity.
This is a rare study of the impact of multinationals on a host nation,
particularly before World War One, and that focuses on a successful
resource-based economy. Deploying a database of more than 600 firms,
supported by contemporary archives and publications, the work reveals
how multinational influence was contested by domestic enterprise, other
foreign firms, and the strategic investments of governments in network
industries. Nonetheless, foreign agency - particularly investment,
knowledge and entrepreneurship - mattered in the economic development of
Australia in the nineteenth as well as the twentieth centuries. This
book will be of interest to students and researchers in Australian and
international economic and business history, the history of economic
growth and scholars of international business.