of Hungarian Manufacturing Companies Andrea Szalavetz Abstract: This paper examines the patterns of subsidiary autonomy at the organizational periphery: at multinational companies’ (MNCs) manufacturing subsidiaries in Hungary. It investigates the impact of upgrading on subsidiary autonomy. Our case study-based investigation (27 in-depth interviews at 14 manufactur ing subsidiaries) integrates three previously isolated lines of research: 1) subsidiary upgradi ng, 2) subsidiary autonomy and 3) headquarters’ role in MNCs. We find no direct relation between upgrading and subsidiary autonomy, since external factors such as changes in the business environment and/or in parent companies’ strategic decisions often counteract upgrading-induced effects. It is shown that the subsidiaries’ moving up the value chain is paralleled by simila r upward shifts in parent companies’ activity specialization. The reconfiguration of parent compan ies’ activities, together with the expansion of the size and scope of the multinationa l company will necessarily have an impact on the headquarters’ coordination and gove rnance practices: over time they tend to become more formal.
CITATION STYLE
Szalavetz, A. (2015). Upgrading and Subsidiary Autonomy : Experience of Hungarian Manufacturing Companies. Japanese Journal of Comparative Economics, 52(2), 2_1-2_19. https://doi.org/10.5760/jjce.52.2_1
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