Managing firm competitiveness in global markets

The globalization profile of US food firms is mixed. US sales from foreign direct investment is now over six times the level of exports, while US processed food trade balance has moved from +$9 billion in 1995 to - $7 billion in 2004. Competitive forces drive firms to seek new areas of growth, with either portfolio expansion or penetration and expansion in new markets. Although the forces that weigh heavily on a firm are recognized, their influence in determining a firm¿s action in choosing a particular strategy is not well understood. As the nature of food manufacturing is evolving and the operational scope of a food manufacturing firm has grown from local, to regional, national, and global, is there a new role for policy? What we do know is that a firm trades with other firms and that aggregate trade patterns do not fully reflect how firms view prospects, make decisions and factor in policies as they organize themselves for trade. Addressing the potential characterizations of competitiveness for the industry and the firm followed by the conflicting influences of R&D on competitiveness, we focus on what is meant by a global food firm with the use of the experiences of three industry case studies

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gehlhar, M., Regmi, A., Stefanou, S.E., Zoumas, B.
Format: Part of book or chapter of book biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Bononia University Press
Subjects:Life Science,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/managing-firm-competitiveness-in-global-markets
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-3732192023-12-21 Gehlhar, M. Regmi, A. Stefanou, S.E. Zoumas, B. Part of book or chapter of book Competitiveness in Agriculture and the Food Industry: US and EU Perspectives Managing firm competitiveness in global markets 2006 The globalization profile of US food firms is mixed. US sales from foreign direct investment is now over six times the level of exports, while US processed food trade balance has moved from +$9 billion in 1995 to - $7 billion in 2004. Competitive forces drive firms to seek new areas of growth, with either portfolio expansion or penetration and expansion in new markets. Although the forces that weigh heavily on a firm are recognized, their influence in determining a firm¿s action in choosing a particular strategy is not well understood. As the nature of food manufacturing is evolving and the operational scope of a food manufacturing firm has grown from local, to regional, national, and global, is there a new role for policy? What we do know is that a firm trades with other firms and that aggregate trade patterns do not fully reflect how firms view prospects, make decisions and factor in policies as they organize themselves for trade. Addressing the potential characterizations of competitiveness for the industry and the firm followed by the conflicting influences of R&D on competitiveness, we focus on what is meant by a global food firm with the use of the experiences of three industry case studies en Bononia University Press application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/managing-firm-competitiveness-in-global-markets https://edepot.wur.nl/31454 Life Science Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic Life Science
Life Science
spellingShingle Life Science
Life Science
Gehlhar, M.
Regmi, A.
Stefanou, S.E.
Zoumas, B.
Managing firm competitiveness in global markets
description The globalization profile of US food firms is mixed. US sales from foreign direct investment is now over six times the level of exports, while US processed food trade balance has moved from +$9 billion in 1995 to - $7 billion in 2004. Competitive forces drive firms to seek new areas of growth, with either portfolio expansion or penetration and expansion in new markets. Although the forces that weigh heavily on a firm are recognized, their influence in determining a firm¿s action in choosing a particular strategy is not well understood. As the nature of food manufacturing is evolving and the operational scope of a food manufacturing firm has grown from local, to regional, national, and global, is there a new role for policy? What we do know is that a firm trades with other firms and that aggregate trade patterns do not fully reflect how firms view prospects, make decisions and factor in policies as they organize themselves for trade. Addressing the potential characterizations of competitiveness for the industry and the firm followed by the conflicting influences of R&D on competitiveness, we focus on what is meant by a global food firm with the use of the experiences of three industry case studies
format Part of book or chapter of book
topic_facet Life Science
author Gehlhar, M.
Regmi, A.
Stefanou, S.E.
Zoumas, B.
author_facet Gehlhar, M.
Regmi, A.
Stefanou, S.E.
Zoumas, B.
author_sort Gehlhar, M.
title Managing firm competitiveness in global markets
title_short Managing firm competitiveness in global markets
title_full Managing firm competitiveness in global markets
title_fullStr Managing firm competitiveness in global markets
title_full_unstemmed Managing firm competitiveness in global markets
title_sort managing firm competitiveness in global markets
publisher Bononia University Press
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/managing-firm-competitiveness-in-global-markets
work_keys_str_mv AT gehlharm managingfirmcompetitivenessinglobalmarkets
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AT zoumasb managingfirmcompetitivenessinglobalmarkets
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