Publication | Closed Access
Overcoming the Liability of Foreignness
2.9K
Citations
43
References
1995
Year
International EconomicsCross-border ManagementLawNew YorkMultinational EnterpriseInternationalizationCross-border ChallengeInternational Business StrategyMultinational SubunitsManagementInternational BusinessGlobal StrategyInternational ManagementInternational SalesInternational RelationsIntegrated Environment FaceInternational LawStrategic ManagementGlobalizationInternational FirmsBusinessBusiness StrategyInternational Organization
This study addressed the question of whether firms in a competitive, globally integrated environment face a “liability of foreignness” and to what extent either importing home-country organizational capabilities or copying the practices of successful local firms can help them overcome this liability. Predictions were tested with a paired sample of 24 foreign exchange trading rooms of major Western and Japanese banks in New York and Tokyo. Results support the existence of a liability of foreignness and the role of a firm's administrative heritage in providing competitive advantage to its multinational subunits. They also highlight the difficulty firms face in copying organizational practices from other firms.
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