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Henry Wai-Chung Yeung
insights – our attentive consideration of
economic relations spanning different
spaces and places. Instead of seeing economic action as discrete decisions in the
context of arm’s length market transactions – a common problem in most
economic models of TNCs, the network perspective identifies relational synergis-
tic effects embedded in ongoing interaction among social actors.
One such critical synergy in the case of large Asian firms and TNCs is the role
of
family in their ownership and control. The
World Investment Report 2004
describes that in 2002, some 32 of the world’s top 50 TNCs from developing
economies ranked by foreign assets originated from Asia. At least 18 of these
32 Asian TNCs are family-owned and controlled. The rest are mostly state-owned
TNCs from Singapore and Malaysia (about 10 of them). The dominant role of
family in Asian business and thus the emergence of Asian TNCs may not be
surprising (La Porta et al. 1999). What is rather unexpected is the rapid growth
and expansion of these large TNCs from Asia to become significant competitors
in the global economy by the turn of the new millennium. A direct research
problem emanating from this economic-geographical phenomenon is the
concomitant evolution of family business and homegrown TNCs in Asia.
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