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ID191668
Title ProperResource nationalism and asymmetric bargaining power
Other Title Information a study of government-MNC strife in Venezuela and Tanzania
LanguageENG
AuthorArbucias, Daniel
Summary / Abstract (Note)This work conducts a comparative analysis of strife between governments and multinational corporations (MNC) in Venezuela and Tanzania, postulating that subtle shifts in bargaining power stemming from petroleum in Venezuela and diamonds in Tanzania lead to large differences in government-MNC strife. Oil-rich Venezuela tends to experience incrementally consistent and capital-intensive strife pinned against prices, which quickly becomes inter-sectionalised and internationalised. Conversely, diamond-wealthy Tanzania suffers from intermittent, erratic, localised, and labour-focused strife independent of diamond prices, which becomes neither inter-sectionalised nor internationalised. Such asymmetric shifts in bargaining power, though initially insignificant, ultimately produce variations in outcomes, contributing to different styles of resource nationalism.
`In' analytical NoteCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 36, No.2; Apr 2023: p.220-240
Journal SourceCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol: 36 No 2
Key WordsResource nationalism and Asymmetric ;  Government-MNC Strife ;  Venezuela and Tanzania


 
 
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