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multinational corporation |
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multinational corporation, business enterprise with manufacturing, sales, or service subsidiaries in one or more foreign countries, also known as a transnational or international corporation. These corporations originated early in the 20th cent. and proliferated after World War II. Typically, a multinational corporation develops new products in its native country and manufactures them abroad, often in Third World nations, thus gaining trade advantages and economies of labor and materials. Almost all the largest multinational firms are American, Japanese, or West European. Such corporations have had worldwide influence—over other business entities and even over governments, many of which have imposed controls on them. During the last two decades of the 20th cent. many smaller corporations also became multinational, some of them in developing nations. Proponents of such enterprises maintain that they create employment, create wealth, and improve technology in countries that are in dire need of such development. Critics, however, point to their inordinate political influence, their exploitation of developing nations, and the loss of jobs that results in the corporations' home countries. multinational corporationAny corporation registered and operating in more than one country at a time, usually with its headquarters in a single country. A firm's advantages in establishing itself multinationally include both vertical and horizontal economies of scale (reductions in cost that result from an expanded level of output). Critics usually regard the multinational corporation as destructive of local economies abroad and as prone to monopolistic practices. See also conglomerate. |
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As a transnational company, we are focused on creating cross-functional, global teams that achieve success -- whether it's improving customer satisfaction, creating a new product, or collaborating on a sales contract," said John Schwarz, chief executive officer at Business Objects. Pharmaceutical Company Image 2002, the sixth edition of the pioneering study on how the drug industry is perceived by health care professionals, will be released in June by Scott-Levin, a Quintiles Transnational company (Nasdaq:QTRN). Almost as soon as a generic form of Prozac became available, it was covered by 91 percent of managed care formularies, according to the Fall 2001 Managed Care Formulary Drug Audit from Scott-Levin, a Quintiles Transnational company (Nasdaq: QTRN). |
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