MNC trade does account for a substantial share of US trade. MNC
associated US exports accounted for 63 per cent of total US exports in
1999, having fallen from 77 per cent in 1982 (Table 4). A substantial
chunk of those exports were to MNC affiliates abroad. Thus intra-firm
trade accounted for 25 per cent of all exports. If the surveyed MNCs
account for all of these intra-firm exports, then it follows that close
to 40 per cent of MNC exports from the US is intra-firm. Intangibles
embodied in these goods and those sold to other persons account for a
substantial share of parent gross product. What is surprising, is that
MNCs have a much smaller role in US imports than in US exports. The
share of MNC associated US imports has fallen from 50 per cent in 1982
to 37 per cent in 1999, and only 17 per cent of US imports are
intra-firm. Thus the view that American firms are increasingly
relocating abroad to cater to US markets appears to be far from the
truth. US imports come from other sources. US multinational parents and
MOFAs are still predominantly targeting local markets, and if at all US
MNCs are targeting foreign markets based on US production rather than US
markets based on global production.
Table 4 >>
This, however, does not mean that MNC presence is not an important
factor affecting developing countries. This is the view often gleaned
from the fact that even now a large share of global FDI flows are to the
developed countries. But developing countries are the ones in which US
MNCs account for a significant share of host GDP (Table 3). In fact, 11
out of the top 20 countries ranked according to MNC share in host GDP
are developing countries, including Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong,
Indonesia, Chile, Mexico and Philippines, which are known to have
followed strategies aimed at attracting FDI. There are many more
developing countries in the list of the top 40 in terms of MNC
contribution to host GDP. Even this evidence should be treated with
caution, since it does not include joint ventures in which US MNCs have
a minority share.
Table 3 >>
What needs to be noted is that the expansion of US capital abroad has
increasingly taken the form of acquisitions of existing firms as opposed
to investment in green-field projects. Such acquisitions, which are
followed by the modernization or even replacement of the acquired firms’
assets, allows for US firms to capture market shares in which
pre-existing brands are replaced by those of the acquiring firm. In
1999, for example, 577 of 1077 newly established affiliates of US MNCs
were acquired rather than newly established. The consequent
standardization of brands sold worldwide has been widely noted.
Underlying such standardization is the growing command of US firms of
the gross product of host countries. Combined with the emergence of new
industries like the information sector where US MNCs dominate, this
could mean that the next benchmark survey could reflect a qualitative
shift in MNC presence in the developing world. But, the evidence as of
now indicates that that presence would not be so much a sign of
relocation of US economic activity to low cost sites abroad, but the
growing dominance of these MNCs over world markets through exports and
local production.