Product Cycle, Wintelism, and Cross-national Production Networks (CPN) for Developing Countries-- China's Telecom Manufacturing Industry as A Case
Zixiang Alex Tan

TL;DR
This paper examines China's telecom manufacturing industry, applying product cycle theory and analyzing the influence of Wintelism and cross-national networks on local industry development.
Contribution
It extends existing literature by applying product cycle theory to China and analyzing the impact of global production networks and Wintelism on local industry.
Findings
Limited local multinational subsidiaries in China's telecom sector.
Significant influence of Wintelism on China's indigenous industry.
Potential signs of development in cross-national production networks.
Abstract
Focusing on the telecom manufacturing industry in China, this paper contends that the existing literature needs to be expanded in order to explain the Chinese case. First, product cycle theory could be applied to explain multinational corporations' strategies of importing and localizing their products in China in order to take advantage of lower labor costs and often more significantly to break barriers to the Chinese market. Second, there are no significant indicators pointing to local multinational subsidiaries and indigenous manufacturers serving as a substantial part of the cross-national production networks in the global telecom industry yet, although there are some signs of potential development. Third, the success of "Wintelism" and the maturity of cross-national production networks in the global market have had significant impacts on China's indigenous industry.
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal trade and economics · Firm Innovation and Growth · International Business and FDI
