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Research on foreign ownership in Norwegian industry

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Whether a company is Norwegian or foreign owned do not appear to be of ... the Norwegian subsidiaries of foreign MNEs have considerably varying roles, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Research on foreign ownership in Norwegian industry


1
  • Research on foreign ownership in Norwegian
    industry

2
Stock of foreign direct investments (FDI) in
Norway, 1992-2002 (Norges Bank)
3
  • The main motive behind foreign establishments in
    Norway is market access
  • Mergers and acquisitions are the most common
    establishment strategies
  • Foreign ownership is most common in the oil
    sector and in services (trade, finance,
    insurance)
  • While FDI in industry is limited in relative
    terms, approximately 1/3 of the share capital in
    listed manufacturing firms is foreign owned

4

Foreign ownership in Norwegian industry, Gabriel
R. G. Benito (1996)
5
  • Poses the question of whether it matters if a
    firm is foreign owned or Norwegian owned - and if
    so, how
  • Discussion based on existing litterature
  • Starting point substantial disagreement in the
    public debate on the role foreign ownership has
    and should have in Norwegian industry

6
  • Generally few studies of FDI in Norway
  • Previous studies include
  • (1) Stonehill (1965) foreign owned firms were
    generally larger and more efficient than
    Norwegian owned firms
  • (2) Maktutredningen (1982), Midttun, Noreng and
    Nygaard (1987) foreign owned firms were not more
    profitable than Norwegian owned firms within the
    same brances of industry
  • (3) Simpson (1994) foreign owned firms were
    larger and more efficient
  • (4) Kvinge (1994) close-downs were more
    frequent for Norwegian owned firms than for
    foreign owned, and the latter showed a more
    positive development with regards to employment
  • Indicate that FDI in Norway have been beneficial
    to the national industry in many respects

7
  • Ownership matters, but should be assessed
    according to other crititeria than nationality

8
  • Study of national and regional effects of
    foreign ownership in Norwegian industry by the
    Foundation for Research in Economics and Business
    Administration (1999)

9
Main findings
  • Whether a company is Norwegian or foreign owned
    do not appear to be of particular importance to
    the number of linkages to the surrounding region
  • Regional effects are dependent upon the status
    the Norwegian subsidiary has in the multinational
    as a whole - the more strategic responsibilities
    the subsidiary had, the stronger were the links
    to the surrounding region
  • The majority of the firms purchased goods and
    services locally, but the extent varied
  • Staff was recruited locally from competing firms,
    institutions of higher education, college
    training schemes, employment companies, and
    through internal recruitment
  • 19 of 21 of the subsidiaries were involved in RD
    activities - either in-house or through Norwegian
    RD institutions

10
  • The report recommends that there is established a
    network of regional offices that offers
    information and other services to foreign firms
    that invest/are interested in investing in
    Norwegian industry

11
  • Industrial clusters and foreign companies
    centres of excellence in Norway, Gabriel R.G.
    Benito (2000)

12
Starting point
  • (1) The general acknowledgement that the effects
    of foreign ownership on local industry depend on
    the role and responsibilities assigned to the
    subsidiary
  • (2) That while earlier research on MNEs tended to
    view them as traditional unitary firms in which
    the parent company constituted the centre and the
    foreign subsidiaries the periphery, it is now
    increasingly recognized that subsidiaries have
    widely different roles and that
  • (3) Some subsidiaries become centres of
    excellence, by which is meant that they control
    resources on which other parts of the MNE depend
    for their operation, and thus hold a strategic
    position in the corporation

13
Main question
  • To what extent have centres of excellence been
    established in Norway by foreign MNEs?

14
Findings and conclusion
  • While only a minority of foreign owned units in
    Norway could be given the status of centres of
    excellence, such CoEs seemed to be more than
    just a rarity
  • Depending on the criteria, their number ranged
    from 28 to 221
  • CoEs appeared to be unevenly distributed across
    industries
  • the Norwegian subsidiaries of foreign MNEs have
    considerably varying roles, which in turn
    elucidates the importance of not only what sort
    of FDI a country is able to attract, but also of
    the subsequent development of subsidiary roles

15
Study on environmental influences of MNE
subsidiary roles, by Benito, Grøgaard and Narula
(2003)
16
  • Examines the importance of environmental factors
    in determining MNE subsidiary roles in the Nordic
    countries
  • Subsidiary roles are assessed in terms of scope
    of activities and competence level
  • Particular focus upon one specific environmental
    factor EU membership
  • Based on a large-scale survey of foreign owned
    units in three Nordic countries Denmark, Finland
    and Norway of which the two former are EU
    members and the latter not

17
Findings and conclusion
  • Subsidiaries in Norway scored significantly lower
    in terms of both scope of activities and
    competence level than those in Denmark and
    Finland
  • This finding held true even when controlled for
    other potentially influential factors
  • Thus membership of an integration scheme such as
    the EU plays a significant role in determining
    subsidiary roles - the reason being that such
    schemes require economic convergence,
    establishment of common institutions and
    synchronized policy framworks

18
  • Studies of the effects of globalisation on
    innovativeness, competitiveness and grotwh of
    firms and regions, the TIK Centre at the
    University of Oslo
  • the effects of foreign ownership is to a large
    extent determined by the structural
    characteristics of the business system in the
    foreign owners home country
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