Abstract

We conduct an unique longitudinal analysis on internationalisation patterns for a sample of 600 UK firms over a 23-year sample period from 1990 to 2012. We use three measures of multinationality – the classification system for firm-level multinationality of Aggarwal, Berrill, Hutson and Kearney , foreign sales as a percentage of total sales and the number of geographic segments in which material sales occur as disclosed in the firm’s consolidated accounts. Our results show that multinational levels have increased over time. We find little evidence that firms are regional in their sales, but equally few firms are categorised as global. We also find evidence to support de-internationalisation in some sample years. The industrial analysis shows that health care and basic materials are the most international industries, while Financials, Consumer Services and Utilities are the least multinational. Non-services firms are more multinational than services firms.

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