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American Multinationals and American Economic Interests: New Dimensions to an Old Debate


Theodore Moran


Georgetown University; Center for Global Development

July 22, 2009

Peterson Institute for International Economics Working Paper No. 09-3

Abstract:     
The 2008 election rekindled debate about whether US multinationals shift technology across borders and relocate production in ways that might harm workers and communities at home. President Obama now pledges to end tax breaks for corporations that ship jobs overseas.

The preoccupation about the behavior of American multinationals takes three forms: (1) that US-based multinational corporations may follow a strategy that leads them to abandon the home economy, leaving the workers and communities to cope on their own with few appealing alternatives after the multinationals have left; (2) worse, that US-based multinational corporations may not just abandon home sites but drain off capital, substitute production abroad for exports, and "hollow out" the domestic economy in a zero-sum process that damages those left behind; and (3) worst, that US-based multinational corporations may deploy a rent-gathering apparatus that switches from sharing supranormal profits and externalities with US workers and communities to extracting rents from the United States. Each contains a hypothetical outcome that can be compared with contemporary evidence from the United States and other home countries.

This working paper shows that multinational corporations do not locate their operations in a zero-sum manner that favors host economies at the expense of the home economy. The two-way flow of inward and outward investment does not create an outcome that can be reasonably characterized in any way as "hollowing out" the home economy. The evidence consistently shows that the expansion of MNC operations abroad and the strengthening of MNC operations in the home country are complementary, and the answer to the counterfactual -- would the home country be better off, or would workers in the home country be better off, if home-country MNCs were prevented from engaging in outward investment? -- is indisputably negative.

Making it more difficult to engage in outward investment would not strengthen the home economy in the United States. Quite the contrary, placing obstacles in the way of US multinationals using the United States as the center for conducting their global operations would leave them, their suppliers, their workers, and the communities where they are located worse off and less competitive in the world economy.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 22

Keywords: International investment, foreign direct investment, multinational corporations, exports

JEL Classification: JEL: F21, F23, F12, O33, O51

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Date posted: July 23, 2009  

Suggested Citation

Moran, Theodore, American Multinationals and American Economic Interests: New Dimensions to an Old Debate (July 22, 2009). Peterson Institute for International Economics Working Paper No. 09-3. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1437673 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1437673

Contact Information

Theodore Moran (Contact Author)
Georgetown University ( email )
Washington, DC 20057
United States
Center for Global Development
1800 Massachusetts Ave NW
Third Floor
Washington, DC 20036
United States
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