Difference between revisions of "Multinational corporation"
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| − | A '''multinational corporation''' is a company having offices, stores or factories in more than one nation. Examples include [[Exxon]], [[Apple]], [[Toyota]], [[Ford]], [[General Motors]], [[IBM]], Microsoft, [[Coca-Cola]], Nike and [[Wal-Mart]]. | + | A '''multinational corporation''' is a company having offices, stores or factories in more than one nation. Examples include [[Exxon]], [[Apple]], [[Toyota]], [[Ford]], [[General Motors]], [[IBM]], Microsoft, [[Coca-Cola]], [[Nike, Inc.]] and [[Wal-Mart]]. |
Many multinational corporations have [[asset]]s, [[cash flow]], and [[balance sheet]]s larger than the [[Gross domestic product]] of many members of the [[United Nations]] General Assembly. Their [[lobbying]] and political influence globally can be quite extensive in [[trade]] matters. | Many multinational corporations have [[asset]]s, [[cash flow]], and [[balance sheet]]s larger than the [[Gross domestic product]] of many members of the [[United Nations]] General Assembly. Their [[lobbying]] and political influence globally can be quite extensive in [[trade]] matters. | ||
Latest revision as of 04:27, June 27, 2021
A multinational corporation is a company having offices, stores or factories in more than one nation. Examples include Exxon, Apple, Toyota, Ford, General Motors, IBM, Microsoft, Coca-Cola, Nike, Inc. and Wal-Mart.
Many multinational corporations have assets, cash flow, and balance sheets larger than the Gross domestic product of many members of the United Nations General Assembly. Their lobbying and political influence globally can be quite extensive in trade matters.