Trade or multinational production? Consumer preferences and multiproduct firms

Thomas, C.ORCID logo (2017). Trade or multinational production? Consumer preferences and multiproduct firms. In Alcácer, J., Kogut, B., Thomas, C. & Yin Yeung, B. (Eds.), Geography, Location, and Strategy (pp. 49-85). Emerald Group Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1108/S0742-332220170000036003
Copy

This paper shows that consumer preference heterogeneity affects whether multinational firms serve local markets via imports or local production. Firms are least likely to choose local production over imports for product varieties that have relatively inelastic demand because transport costs have a smaller impact on the firm’s local profits for these products. The results suggest that there is complementarity between centralized production, with local market access via imports, and strategies that maintain low price elasticities at the brand level, such as advertising and within-brand product proliferation. A partial equilibrium study of the laundry detergent industry in Western Europe illustrates how firms and consumers interact at different levels of transport costs and reveals the product varieties that are most and least likely to be manufactured locally when transport costs are high.

Full text not available from this repository.

Export as

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV
Export