Multinational Enterprises, Risk Management, and the Business and Economics of Peace

Jason Miklian, Jennifer Oetzel

Multinational Business Review, 2017

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Purpose. The purpose of this paper is to reconceptualize how managers of multinational enterprises (MNEs) manage risk, particularly in fragile and/or conflict-affected areas of operation. The authors suggest that MNEs consider reducing risk at its source rather than trying to avoid or react to risks as they occur. By incorporating peacebuilding strategies, managers may not only reduce investment risk but also contribute to stability and prosperity in the communities where they operate, and gain a competitive advantage in doing so.Design/methodology/approach. The authors show how firms can take a more holistic approach to working in conflict-affected areas. They do so by overlaying conceptualizations of risk with those of peacebuilding and then use case examples to illustrate how such actions work in practice.Findings. Using a series of examples, the authors find that MNEs that incorporate peacebuilding frameworks in their risk calculations in complex settings tend to have a better understanding of local environments and how they affect firm operations and profitability. These same MNEs may hold a long-term advantage over international competitors that do not share the same understanding.Originality/value. The authors argue that the study of relationships between international businesses and society in conflict-affected or fragile areas of operation is under-developed and tends to focus on negative (risk-aversion) aspects as opposed to positive (value-added) opportunities. This paper offers new ways in which these relationships can be reconceptualized. The authors’ main takeaway is that a peacebuilding approach does not require corporations to be arbitrators of peace at the expense of profit. Rather, it is instead a broader way to conceptualize and weigh risk when working in the world’s most challenging regions. This approach is more likely to be in the long-term interest of both the firm and the local society where the firm operates.

Key Messages

  • Multinationals should reduce risk at its source rather than avoid or react to it, and peacebuilding strategies offer a way to do so.
  • Firms that fold peacebuilding into risk calculations understand local environments better and gain a long-term advantage over competitors that do not.
  • A peacebuilding approach to risk does not trade profit for peace; it is a broader way to weigh risk in the world's most challenging regions.

Research Topics

multinational enterprises risk management peace economics MNEs

Citation

Jason Miklian, Jennifer Oetzel. "Multinational Enterprises, Risk Management, and the Business and Economics of Peace." Multinational Business Review, 2017.

Related Research Areas

BibTeX Citation
@article{miklian2017_multinational_enterprises__ris,
  title = {Multinational Enterprises, Risk Management, and the Business and Economics of Peace},
  author = {Miklian, Jason and Oetzel, Jennifer},
  journal = {Multinational Business Review},
  year = {2017},
  url = {https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/MBR-09-2017-0064/full/pdf}
}