Examinando por Materia "Chile"
Mostrando 1 - 11 de 11
Resultados por página
Opciones de ordenación
Ítem As the Heart and Not as an Appendix(Universidad EAFIT, 2017-11-01) Giraldo Cerón, Andrés Felipe; Equipo Universidad de los niñosÍtem Brand personality of Business Schools in Chile: Model proposal(Universidad EAFIT, 2015-11-30) Araya-Castillo, Luis; Escobar-Farfan, Manuel AntonioÍtem Business education and creation of awareness for disaster risk management in Chile(Universidad EAFIT, 2016-07-19) Muñoz-Gómez, LeonardoÍtem Can IPR Affect MNE’s Entry Modes? The Chilean Case(Universidad EAFIT, 2017-10-30) Canavire-Bacarreza, Gustavo; Castro Peñarrieta, Luis; gcanavir@eafit.edu.coThis paper analyzes the effect of stronger Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) on the entry modes chosen by MNEs in the Chilean market. MNEs can choose between exporting, introducing Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and licensing to a domestic firm in Chile. We use plant-level data for the 2001–2007 and exploite the exogenous reform of IPR in Chile in 2005 to examine the effect of the change in IPR on the overall foreign presence in Chile, controlling for the activities of industries where high levels of technology transfer and imitation are important factors. The main results show that stronger IPR change the mode of entry chosen by MNEs. In this case, FDI is replaced by licensing. This is explained by Chile’s high absorptive capacity during this period. Moreover, we test whether this effect differs across high-tech and low-tech industries and conclude that the displacement of FDI is less severe in high-tech industries.Ítem Can Licensing Induce Productivity? Exploring the IPR Effect(Universidad EAFIT, 2017-10-30) Castro Peñarrieta, Luis; Canavire-Bacarreza, Gustavo; gcanavir@eafit.edu.coLicensing is one of the main channels for technology transfer from foreignowned multinational enterprises (MNEs) to domestic plants. This transfer occurs within industries and across industries, which results in technology spillovers that can affect both intra- and inter-industry productivity. We propose a theoretical model that predicts that this effect can be enhanced by the implementation of stronger intelectual property rights (IPR). Using Chilean plant-level data for the 2001–2007 period and exogenous variation from a reform in 2005, we test our theoretical predictions and find positive inter-industry effects, which result in higher productivity for domestic plants. However, there are negative spillovers when licensing is implemented within the same industry. We also test for the effect of stronger IPR and find that stronger IPR reduces intra-sector spillovers but increases inter-industry spillovers. Moreover, the IPR effect is stronger on firms that are, on average, smaller and have low productivity. Our results are robust not only to a series of definitions of IPR, licensing and productivity but also to a set of different specifications.Ítem Foreign Direct Investment in Chile: Historical Process, changing political ideologies and the responses of MNEs(Universidad EAFIT, 31/10/2013) Carolina Salcedo; Michèle E.M Akoorie; Universidad EAFIT; Professor of International Management, Waikato Management School, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand.Ítem El gobierno de Bernardo O’Higgins visto a través de cinco agentes estadounidenses, 1817-1823(Universidad EAFIT, 2016-12-13) Ossa Santa Cruz, Juan LuisÍtem Infraestructura vial: análisis comparado entre Chile y Colombia 2000-2015. Un enfoque desde la economía institucional(Universidad EAFIT, 2016) Hernández Escobar, María Angélica; Ruiz Galeano, Ana María; Ramírez Gómez, Mauricio AndrésÍtem International Events: Sharing Experiences Around the Globe(Universidad EAFIT, 2013-11-01) Equipo Universidad de los niños; Equipo Universidad de los niñosÍtem Plan exportador Inversiones Cool Drink S.A.S.(Universidad EAFIT, 2022) Sánchez Ayure, Óscar; Henríquez Díaz, Ángela MaríaÍtem We Were on a Trip(Universidad EAFIT, 2008-11-01) Equipo Universidad de los niños; Equipo Universidad de los niños