Strategic Management Review > Vol 5 > Issue 1-2

Edith Penrose and the Theory of the Multinational Enterprise

Peter J. Buckley, Professor of International Business, Alliance Manchester Business School, University of Manchester, UK, peter.buckley-2@manchester.ac.uk
 
Suggested Citation
Peter J. Buckley (2024), "Edith Penrose and the Theory of the Multinational Enterprise", Strategic Management Review: Vol. 5: No. 1-2, pp 113-124. http://dx.doi.org/10.1561/111.00000064

Publication Date: 08 Apr 2024
© 2024 now Publishers, Inc.
 
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Keywords
International strategystrategic decision-making
 

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In this article:
The Basic Penrose Model 
The Growth of the Firm 
Integration versus Internalization 
Penrose and the MNE 
Penrose and the Growth of the MNE 
Penrose and International Management 
"Foreignness" in Penrose's Approach to International Firms 
Penrose's Innovations 
References 

Abstract

Edith Penrose had a unique view of the multinational enterprise (MNE). She analyzed the MNE as a multiplant firm. Just like domestic (uninational) firms, the size of the MNE is a function of the rate of growth of the firm and time elapsed. For a multinational firm, growth is, therefore, explicable by the same factors as a uninational firm. In essence, the size of the firm is a less interesting question, both theoretically and empirically for Penrose than is the growth of the firm. A firm's size is merely a snapshot at a given point of time in its growth trajectory because it is a static frozen picture of a dynamic process. Penrose had a singular take on international management, arguing that foreign subsidiaries require less administrative coordination than domestic equivalents. Similarly, her view of "foreignness" does not require a special theory of the MNE since it treats MNEs as a simple extension of the multiplant domestic firm. Penrose introduced innovations into the theory of the MNE based on "speed of entry" into foreign markets.

DOI:10.1561/111.00000064

Companion

Strategic Management Review, Volume 5, Issue 1-2 Special Issue in Honor on Edith Penrose and The Theory of the Growth of the Firm
See the other articles that are part of this special issue.