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Henry Wai-Chung Yeung
geographers to draw significant interconnections between
the rapid emergence of
these developing country TNCs and the tremendous transformations in their
home economies in Asia during the past three decades – a phenomenon broadly
known as ‘globalizing Asian capitalisms’. Indeed, many TNCs from developing
Asian countries had a humble origin as regional trading and commercial ventures;
they had internationalized across national boundaries as early as the late nineteenth
century. Their
participation in globalization, however, did not occur until much later
in the 1980s when the global economy was increasingly competitive, their orga-
nizational capabilities were much more consolidated, and their home govern-
ments were serious about growing ‘national champions’ (see Yeung 1999). In this
sense, these Asian-origin
TNCs are important conduits through which their
burgeoning domestic economies become articulated into the global economy.
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