tailieunhanh - Transnational Corporations (TNCs)

The search for resources including minerals, petroleum, and foodstuffs. For example: The US agribusiness giant United Fruit Company: controlled 90 per cent of US banana imports by 1899. Royal Dutch/Shell accounted for 20 per cent of Russia's total oil production. In Japan: Mitsui and Mitsubishi – “financial clique” | Phạm Thị Huỳnh Như BABAIU10103 Lê Thị Như Thuỷ BABAIU10026 Nguyễn Bá Hải Bằng BABAWE10531 Hồ Việt Dũng BABAIU10013 Lê Chung Thanh Thảo BAIU09495 Lê Hoàng Anh Thư BABAIU10170 Lâm Cẩm Ngọc BABAIU10184 Hoàng Trần Đức Hồng BABANS10657 Trần Ngọc Hiền BABAIU10209 Nguyễn Phương Thảo BABAIU10217 History of TNCs The Organizational Structure The rises of TNCs in the 21st century Example A transnational corporation (TNC) is a huge company that does business in several countries. Examples: Nestlé Unilever Cadbury-Schweppes BP-Amoco From the Origins to the Second World War The earliest historical origins of transnational corporations can be traced to the major colonizing and imperialist ventures from Western Europe, notably England and Holland, which began in the 16th century and proceeded for the next several hundred years. During this period, firms such as the British East India Trading Company were formed to promote the trading activities or territorial acquisitions of their home countries in | Phạm Thị Huỳnh Như BABAIU10103 Lê Thị Như Thuỷ BABAIU10026 Nguyễn Bá Hải Bằng BABAWE10531 Hồ Việt Dũng BABAIU10013 Lê Chung Thanh Thảo BAIU09495 Lê Hoàng Anh Thư BABAIU10170 Lâm Cẩm Ngọc BABAIU10184 Hoàng Trần Đức Hồng BABANS10657 Trần Ngọc Hiền BABAIU10209 Nguyễn Phương Thảo BABAIU10217 History of TNCs The Organizational Structure The rises of TNCs in the 21st century Example A transnational corporation (TNC) is a huge company that does business in several countries. Examples: Nestlé Unilever Cadbury-Schweppes BP-Amoco From the Origins to the Second World War The earliest historical origins of transnational corporations can be traced to the major colonizing and imperialist ventures from Western Europe, notably England and Holland, which began in the 16th century and proceeded for the next several hundred years. During this period, firms such as the British East India Trading Company were formed to promote the trading activities or territorial acquisitions of their home countries in the Far East, Africa, and the Americas. The transnational corporation as it is known today, however, did not really appear until the 19th century, with the advent of industrial capitalism and its consequences: the development of the factory system; larger, more capital intensive manufacturing processes; better storage techniques; and faster means of transportation. The search for resources including minerals, petroleum, and foodstuffs. For example: The US agribusiness giant United Fruit Company: controlled 90 per cent of US banana imports by 1899. Royal Dutch/Shell accounted for 20 per cent of Russia's total oil production. In Japan: Mitsui and Mitsubishi – “financial clique” During the 19th and early 20th centuries, the search for resources including minerals, petroleum, and foodstuffs as well as pressure to protect or increase markets drove transnational expansion by companies almost exclusively from the United States and a handful of Western European nations. Sixty per cent of .

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