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Coping with Autocracy: Corporate political activity, institutional duality, and MNE - local firm rivalry during \institutional backsliding
by
Sallai, Dorottya
, Schnyder, Gerhard
in
Emerging markets
/ Foreign subsidiaries
/ Multinational corporations
/ Political behavior
2017
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Coping with Autocracy: Corporate political activity, institutional duality, and MNE - local firm rivalry during \institutional backsliding
by
Sallai, Dorottya
, Schnyder, Gerhard
in
Emerging markets
/ Foreign subsidiaries
/ Multinational corporations
/ Political behavior
2017
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Coping with Autocracy: Corporate political activity, institutional duality, and MNE - local firm rivalry during \institutional backsliding
Paper
Coping with Autocracy: Corporate political activity, institutional duality, and MNE - local firm rivalry during \institutional backsliding
2017
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Overview
This study contributes to the corporate political activities (CPA) and the \"institutional duality\" literature by investigating how MNE subsidiaries and local firms develop their CPA in an increasingly politicised environment in an emerging market (EMs). Our longitudinal case study, based on interviews with top-level managers in Hungary, supports the view that institutional duality is not just a constraint for MNEs, but allows even firms from institutionally distant economies to successfully transfer political capabilities to the host context, providing them with competitive advantage over local firms. However, we also find that the value of these capabilities changes as institutional change progresses in our post-socialist case. Therefore institutional duality needs to be understood as a time-dependent phenomenon.
Publisher
Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
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