4.5 Review

Host Country Politics and Internationalization: A Meta-Analytic Review

Journal

JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES
Volume 60, Issue 1, Pages 204-241

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/joms.12853

Keywords

internationalization; meta-analysis; multinational enterprises; political administration; political decision-making; political risk; political strategy

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This study investigates how host country politics influence internationalization and provides insights in three areas: conceptualization of host country politics, impact on internationalization steps, and moderating influence of home-country conditions. The study suggests analyzing host country politics instead of political risk and proposes a dynamic management approach across the internationalization process. Additionally, it highlights the importance of building political and uncertainty management capabilities based on home-country conditions.
We study how host country politics influence internationalization. Our meta-analysis clarifies which ideas receive support across the empirical literature and reveals new theoretical insights in three areas: the conceptualization of host country politics, the impact of host country politics on internationalization steps, and the moderating influence of home-country conditions on the previous relation. First, regarding the concept of host country politics, we propose analysing host country politics rather than political risk, and separating political decision-making, i.e., regulation creation, from political administration, i.e., regulation implementation. Second, on the effect of host country politics on internationalization steps, we suggest a dynamic management across the internationalization process, with managers shifting from avoiding harm through country selection to pre-empting harm through entry mode selection, to adapting to harm to ensure survival. Third, studying how home-country conditions modify the impact of host country politics on internationalization, we propose that multinationals build political and uncertainty management capabilities from their exposure to home country conditions that help them manage host country politics better.

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