2016
DOI: 10.1590/0101-31572015v36n04a06
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The role of transnational corporations in the international insertion of Brazilian manufactures in the context of productive restructuring

Abstract: Journal of Political Economy, vol . 36, nº 4 (145), pp . 769-787, October-December/2016 770 of Brazilian manufactures in terms of international trade. It has been concluded that the significant participation of TNCs in Brazilian foreign trade reveals that the international insertion of the country's industrial output presents an increasing dependency on strategic decisions of TNCs.

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…It therefore becomes interesting to observe how some of the studies reviewed suggest an increased participation of primary commodities within the structure of Brazilian exports, both in scenarios in which Brazil joins, or stand outside different proposed mega-regional agreements. These findings should thereby feed into recently expressed worries of gradual de-industrialization (Dávila-Fernándesz, 2015) symptoms of commodity-induced Dutch disease (Bresser-Pereira et al, 2016;Bacha & Fishlow, 2011) as well as the relatively declining significance constituted by manufactures and high technology inputs within Brazilian exports (Cunha et al, 2013;Pereira & Dathein, 2016), and the challenges of tapping into global value chains (Hiratuka & Arti, 2017). Crossing such considerations with the findings of the projections reviewed might support the core argument in Rodrik et al, (2004), who underline how the enhancement of economic performance rests on improvement of domestic productive institutions, rather than on increasing openness to international trade per-se, which in the absence of the first condition even might lead to a negative effect on welfare (Rodrik et al, 2004).…”
Section: Structural Implications For Brazilmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…It therefore becomes interesting to observe how some of the studies reviewed suggest an increased participation of primary commodities within the structure of Brazilian exports, both in scenarios in which Brazil joins, or stand outside different proposed mega-regional agreements. These findings should thereby feed into recently expressed worries of gradual de-industrialization (Dávila-Fernándesz, 2015) symptoms of commodity-induced Dutch disease (Bresser-Pereira et al, 2016;Bacha & Fishlow, 2011) as well as the relatively declining significance constituted by manufactures and high technology inputs within Brazilian exports (Cunha et al, 2013;Pereira & Dathein, 2016), and the challenges of tapping into global value chains (Hiratuka & Arti, 2017). Crossing such considerations with the findings of the projections reviewed might support the core argument in Rodrik et al, (2004), who underline how the enhancement of economic performance rests on improvement of domestic productive institutions, rather than on increasing openness to international trade per-se, which in the absence of the first condition even might lead to a negative effect on welfare (Rodrik et al, 2004).…”
Section: Structural Implications For Brazilmentioning
confidence: 74%
“…Through the comparative analysis of the industrial product export similarity index, they study the competitiveness of Chinese and European industrial product exports in the world market [19], and eliminate the impact of the difference in economic scale between the two. The formula is:…”
Section: Trade Competitiveness Indexmentioning
confidence: 99%