Infrastructure collaboration along China’s Belt and Road Initiative: Implications for corporate social responsibility and political activity

Xinya Guan, David Ahlstrom, Junying Liu

Article ID: 4705
Vol 8, Issue 8, 2024

VIEWS - 120 (Abstract) 93 (PDF)

Abstract


Chinese multinational enterprises (MNEs) have increasingly engaged in outward foreign direct investment in recent years, and particularly into the infrastructure sector of developing economies. This has been prompted by the infrastructure-led economic integration plan of China’s Belt and Road Initiative. However, such collaboration faces many challenges. Infrastructure projects are often undertaken in industries, countries, and regions posing particular and difficult challenges, and with divergent, often conflicting interests, with the ensuing conclusion that the MNE is simply exploiting the project and not delivering value to the host country. Overall, not only does the infrastructure project have to be well-functioning with expected returns (or savings) realized, but these projects face close scrutiny from local communities, labor, opposition parties, neighboring countries, and various international bodies and nonprofits, requiring delicate handling of the principals involved. The unfolding of these issues and their management by the multinational are examined through an in-depth longitudinal case study. The data are drawn from major participants and stakeholders around a leading Chinese MNE and the mega project of the construction of a major hydropower plant in Pakistan.


Keywords


infrastructure collaborations; institutional logics; CSR-CPA configuration; belt and road initiative; China; Pakistan

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References


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DOI: https://doi.org/10.24294/jipd.v8i8.4705

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