Interregional meeting of the Expert Group on Transfer of Operative Technology at the Enterprise Level, sponsored by the Division of Public Finance and Financial Institutions, Department of Economic Affairs, United Nations General Secretariat, New York, June 21–26, 1971. See also PenroseEdith T., “Some Problems of Policy Toward Direct Foreign Investment in Developing Countries,”Middle East Economic Papers (Beirut: American University of Beirut, 1962), pp. 121–139; also SeersDudley, “Big Companies and Small Countries: A Practical Proposal,”Kyklos (Vol. XVI, 1963), pp. 599–608; and KidronMichael, Foreign Investments in India (London: Oxford University Press, 1965), especially pp. 238–321.
2.
KindlebergerCharles P., American Business Abroad (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1969), pp. 102–103.
3.
MasonR. Hal, The Transfer of Technology and the Factor Proportion Problem: The Philippines and Mexico (United Nations, UNITAR Research Report No. 10, June 1971).
4.
BreckenfeldGurney, “How the Arabs Changed the Oil Business,”Fortune (August 1971); and VernonRaymond, “The Raw Materials Ventures: The Obsolescing Bargain,”Worldwide P and I Planning (July-August 1971).
5.
See the National Planning Association series on U.S. Business Performance Abroad.
6.
Tables 29 and 33 of U.S. Business Investments in Foreign Countries (U.S. Department of Commerce, 1960), pp. 115 and 121.
7.
See HartshornJ.E., Oil Companies and Governments (London: Faber and Faber, 1962).