Analysis of the data
Porter's discussion of strategies fails capture the highly specific responses needed from home base countries' multinationals to expand into other nations with cultures highly dissimilar to ones' own. In the Competitive Advantage of Nations, Porter assumes a cultural homogeneity and "likeness" and has never published research illustrating a western multinational or for that matter home base country moving into foreign nations. The research Porter completed with the Japanese Ministry of International Trade highlights the insularity and importance of trust through relationships.
The growth of westernized home base industries into China is significantly more complex than Porter theorizes through the diamond or other analytical constructs as defined in Competitive Advantage of Nations. For example, Chinese consumers prove extremely loyal to domestic products and brands, partially because so few Western items existed in the market until the 1990s.
The transformation to a free market economy did little to change the cultural mindset that customers should buy products made exclusively in China. In particular, the interior areas of the country prove most resistant to accepting Western companies and products. In these areas, socialist loyalties and heavy central planning investment dominated prior to 1976, leaving a highly nationalistic legacy. Currently, customers in these regions appear to have a greater interest in preserving the old state subsidized system and have exhibited more resistance to the economic reforms and open-door policy that started...
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