Pontus Braunerhjelm and Karolina Ekholm Over recent decades, foreign
direct investment (FDI) has become a major force in the global economy.
The geographical pattern of capital formation, trade and technological
spillovers across countries and regions, are to an in- creasing extent
determined by the strategies chosen by multinational firms (MNFs).
Between 1982 and 1994, the rate of growth of the global FDI stock was
more than twice that of gross fixed capital formation, the growth of
sales by foreign affiliates of multinational firms well exceeded that of
world exports, and, by 1994, the MNFs accounted for approximately 6
percent of world output (United Nations, 1997, pp. xv-xvi). The overall
mechanisms behind this rapid internationalization in terms of
multinational produc- tion have been attributed to the dismantling of
trade barriers and the deregulation of capital markets, together with
the advances in information technology that have facilitated the
coordination and monitoring of inter- nationally dispersed production.
This development carries two important implications: First, firms
operate in markets characterized by much tougher competition than only a
decade ago, and, second, countries and regions are involved in
competition for production to a much larger extent than before. This
book addresses questions related to the location and geographical
dispersion of the activities by multinational firms, a topic which has
be- come of increasing concern to policy-makers.