The complexity of offshoring: A comparative study of mexican maquiladora plants and indian outsourcing offices from an institutional-prospect theory perspective

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Abstract

To improve our understanding of offshoring and how it is evolving, salient ideas from both institutional and prospect theories are utilized to build a more descriptive model of how decisions are made to (re)direct foreign investment into offshored activities. Careful examinations of the offshoring programs in India and Mexico reveal that they took different investment trajectories during the past decade that can be aptly explained by this integrative model. The primary information used to measure the population trends of offshoring firms in India and Mexico comes from proprietary data sources for each country that issue annual reports on the number of operators in their respective offshoring sectors, that is, services and manufacturing.

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Miller, V. V., Mukherji, A., & Loess, K. (2013). The complexity of offshoring: A comparative study of mexican maquiladora plants and indian outsourcing offices from an institutional-prospect theory perspective. In The Offshoring Challenge: Strategic Design and Innovation for Tomorrow’s Organization (pp. 385–406). Springer-Verlag London Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-4908-8_21

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