Subsidiary Types, Activities, and Location: An Empirical Investigation
Subsidiary Types, Activities, and Location: An Empirical Investigation
Subsidiary Types, Activities, and Location: An Empirical Investigation
You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles
YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.
Grubert, H., & Mutti, J. H. 1991. Taxes, Tariffs <strong>and</strong> Transfer Pricing in Multinational CorporateDecision Making. The Review of Economics <strong>and</strong> Statistics, 73(2): 285-293.Grubert, H., & Mutti, J. H. 2000. Do Taxes Influence Where U.S. Corporations Invest? NationalTax Journal, 53(4): 825-839.Gupta, A. K., & Govindarajan, V. 1991. Knowledge flows <strong>and</strong> the structure of control withinmultinational corporations. Academy of Management Review, 16(4): 768-792.Hartigan, J. A. 1975. Clustering algorithms. New York: John Wiley & Sons.Harzing, A.-W. K. 2000. <strong>An</strong> empirical analysis <strong>and</strong> extension of the Bartlett <strong>and</strong> Ghoshaltypology of multinational companies. Journal of International Business Studies, 31(1): 101-120.Hedlund, G., & Ridderstrale, J. J. 1997. Toward a theory of the self-renewing MNC. In B. Toyne& D. Nigh (Eds.), International business: <strong>An</strong> emerging vision. Columbia: University of SouthCalifornia Press.Hood, N., & Young, S. 1979. The economics of the multinational enterprise. London: LongmanGroup Ltd.Jarillo, J. C., & Martinez, J. I. 1990. Different roles for subsidiaries: The case of multinationalcorporations in Spain. Strategic Management Journal, 11(7): 501-512.Jarillo, J. C. 2003. Strategic Logic. London: Palgrave Macmillan32