Chapter Two
U.S. Multinational Companies are American Companies
It
is increasingly asserted that U.S. multinationals have abandoned the
United States—i.e., that they have little activity left in their
American parents, having “hollowed out” parent employment, capital
investment, and other key activities for relocation abroad. The
drumbeat of recent layoff announcements might seem to bear out this
view.
So is it true that the operations of U.S. parents are no
longer substantial? No. U.S. multinational companies are, first and
foremost, American companies. As a group, U.S. multinationals perform
large shares of America’s productivity-enhancing activities—capital
investment, research and development, and international trade—that lead
to jobs and high average compensation for American workers. And the
worldwide operations of U.S. multinationals are highly concentrated in
America in their U.S. parents, not abroad in their foreign affiliates.
The idea that U.S. multinationals have somehow “abandoned” the United
States is incorrect. They maintain
a large presence in America, both relative to the overall U.S. economy and relative to the size of their
foreign affiliates.
A. U.S. Parent Activities Are Large in the Overall U.S. Economy
U.S.
parents strengthen America through their own extensive operations in
the United States. Beyond employing millions of Americans, parent
companies perform large amounts of the crucial activities that make
their workers and the overall economy more competitive and productive.
For 2006, the most recent year for which comprehensive government data
on the operations of U.S. multinationals are available, Figure 1
reports the share of U.S. private-sector economic activities accounted
for by U.S. parents. § §
Figure 1
U.S. Parent Companies Account for Large Shares
of the Overall U.S. Economy
The
key message of Figure 1 is that U.S. parent companies perform large
shares of America’s productivity-enhancing activities that lead to high
average compensation for American workers.
In the BEA
surveys, parent (and affiliate) employment is measured as the number of
full-time and part-time employees on payroll at yearend. If at that
time employment of a parent (or an affiliate) was unusually high or low
because of temporary factors (e.g., a strike), survey instructions then
request reporting either of employment during “normal operations” or of
an annual average. Capital investment consists of property, plant, and
equipment. Please see the Data Appendix for details on how U.S. parent
activity was matched with that of the overall private sector for each
item in Figure 1.
Employment: Parent companies employed over
21.7 million workers in the United States. This was 19.1% of total U.S.
private-sector payroll employment.
• Output: Parent companies
accounted for 24.9% of all U.S. private-sector output (measured in
terms of gross domestic product)—over $2.5 trillion.
• Capital
Investment: Parent companies purchased $442.6 billion in new property,
plant, and equipment—31.3% of all U.S. private-sector capital
investment.
• Exports: Parent companies exported $495.1 billion of
goods to the rest of the world. This constituted nearly half—48.0%—of
the U.S. total.
• Research and Development: To discover new products
and processes, parent companies performed $187.8 billion of research
and development. This was 75.8% of the total R&D performed by all
U.S. companies.
Moreover, the size of U.S. parent operations in the
overall U.S. economy has been quite stable for decades. For example, a
generation ago in 1988, U.S. parents’ capital investment and R&D
spending were 31.4% and 72.5%, respectively, of the economy-wide
private-sector totals—very close to the 2006 shares cited above. This
stability over time contradicts the idea that U.S. multinationals have
been “abandoning” the United States in recent years, and instead
demonstrates their ongoing contributions to the overall U.S. economy.
All
these productivity-enhancing activities contribute to larger average
paychecks for employees of U.S. multinationals. Figure 2 shows this,
which reports 2006 average annual compensation for workers at U.S.
parents and their counterparts in the rest of the U.S. private sector.
SharesFigure 2
U.S. Parent Companies Pay Higher Average Compensation
Than the Rest of the U.S. Private Sector
Total
2006 compensation at U.S. parent companies was over $1.36 trillion—a
per-worker average of $62,784. This average was $12,163—fully
24.0%—above the 2006 average for the rest of the private sector of
$50,621. Much of this compensation differential stems from the nexus of
competition advantages
achieved by these multinational companies. ***
Employee
compensation as measured in the BEA surveys of multinationals includes
wages, salaries, and benefits—mandated, contracted, and voluntary. See
Data Appendix for details on the calculations in Figure 2. Academic
studies for the United States and many other countries have repeatedly
found that multinational companies pay higher average compensation than
do non-multinationals, even when controlling for observable company
differences such as size and capital intensity. For a detailed
discussion of the facts and interpretation of these performance
differences, see, e.g., Lewis and Richardson (2001) and Council of
Economic Advisers (2007).
U.S. parent companies also
contribute to the U.S. economy through their interactions with other
domestic U.S. firms and, more broadly, the schools and other
institutions that foster skills, talents, and overall productivity. The
performance of domestic competitors is enhanced by exposure to new
techniques and practices of parent companies. Parent companies can also
strengthen domestic suppliers and customers—e.g., by sharing
information with and placing standards on suppliers. The scope for
these links from parents to other domestic companies is very large.
•
In 2006, U.S. parents purchased a total of $5.76 trillion in
intermediate inputs. Of this total, 89.1%—$5.14 trillion—was bought
from other companies in the United States. †††
Contrary to the
common assumption that the global engagement of U.S. multinationals has
eliminated their links to domestic suppliers, over 89 cents out of
every dollar spent by U.S. parents on intermediate inputs is paid to
other companies in the United States, not abroad. And this heavy
reliance on domestic suppliers has been virtually unchanged for
decades: in 1977, U.S. parents purchased 91.3% of their inputs from
other companies in the
United States.
The key message here is
that although small in number at just 2,278 companies in 2006, U.S.
multinationals play a substantial role in the U.S. economy. They employ
millions, invest billions in R&D and capital, and buy from vendors
and ultimately produce trillions of dollars in goods and services.
These activities constitute sizable shares of the overall private
sector today, as they have for decades, and they are a key pillar of
strength for the overall U.S. economy.
Total purchases of
intermediate inputs by parent companies are calculated as total sales
less value-added output. Imported intermediate inputs are measured as
total parent imports of goods. This implicitly assumes that all
imported goods by parent companies are intermediates rather than final
goods. Because some of these imports are final goods and services
rather than intermediates, the calculated share of inputs bought from
domestic suppliers that is reported above lies below the true
domestic-supplier share.
Case Study: Microsoft Corporation
The
contribution of U.S. multinationals to the overall U.S. economy often
extends beyond their main business practices of hiring and paying
workers, buying inputs, and investing in capital and R&D. Many of
these multinationals interact with schools, governments, and other
institutions in ways that foster the human capital and institutions
that help underpin U.S. productivity.
Since its inception in 1975,
Microsoft Corporation has believed in the power of technology to enable
individuals and communities to realize their full potential. Using
technology as a catalyst, Microsoft works to create worldwide networks
through which key education leaders and innovators share experiences,
ideas, and approaches that can be applied around the world. Microsoft
and its partners also share expertise with local governments,
industries and educators, providing the tools and opportunities
required to stimulate local software economies and equip citizens for
success in the 21st century.
In 2003, Microsoft launched Partners in
Learning, a global initiative designed to increase technology access
for schools, foster new approaches to teaching and learning, and
provide education leaders with the proper tools to create and influence
change. To date, Partners in Learning programs have reached more than
80,000 teachers and 3 million students in the United States. Building
on these efforts, in January 2008 Microsoft renewed its commitment to
Partners in Learning, extending the company’s global investment to
nearly $500 million over 10 years.
Other examples of initiatives
include DigiGirlz, a set of programs that provide free opportunities
for high-school girls to learn about careers in technology, talk with
Microsoft employees about their life experiences, and enjoy hands-on
computer and technology workshops.
Research is another area to
highlight. Microsoft Research balances an open academic model with an
effective process for transferring its research to product development
teams. Microsoft Research has invested more than $50 million over the
past four years in support of academic research in the United States, a
sum that has established collaborative institutes at schools including
Carnegie Mellon University, Georgia Tech, the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology, and University of Maryland.
B. By Several Measures, U.S. Parent Activities Are Large Relative to Their Foreign Affiliates
What
about the magnitude of U.S. parent activities relative to the scale of
their foreign affiliates? Do affiliates loom much larger than parents,
such that U.S. multinationals have a far larger footprint outside the
United States than inside?
Figure 3 answers this question by showing
the share of U.S. multinationals’ 2006 worldwide employment, output,
capital investment, and R&D that was accounted for by their U.S.
parent operations.
MillionsFigure 3
U.S. Parents Account for the Large Majority of Worldwide
Activity of U.S. Multinationals80.0
The
key message of Figure 3 is that the worldwide operations of U.S.
multinational companies are highly concentrated in America in their
U.S. parents, not abroad in their foreign affiliates.
• Employment:
U.S. parents account for 69.6% of worldwide employment of U.S.
multinationals—21.7 million parent workers versus 9.5 million at
affiliates. This translates into a ratio of almost 2.3 U.S. employees
for every one affiliate employee.
• Output: U.S. parents account for
71.6% of worldwide output (in terms of value added) of U.S
.multinationals—over $2.5 trillion versus about $1.0 trillion.
•
Capital Investment: U.S. parents undertake 74.3% of worldwide capital
investment by U.S. multinationals—$442.6 billion versus just $153.2
billion. For every $1 in affiliate capital expenditures, parents
invested $2.89 worth in the United States.
• Research and
Development: U.S. parents perform 86.8% of worldwide R&D by U.S.
multinationals: $187.8 billion versus just $28.5 billion, or $6.59 in
parent knowledge discovery for every $1 by affiliates.
The data
clearly show that the United States, not abroad, is where U.S.
multinationals perform the large majority of their operations. Indeed,
this U.S. concentration is especially pronounced for capital spending
and R&D, which reflects America’s underlying endowments in skilled
workers and institutions such as intellectual property rights that
together support investments in human and physical capital.
Have
there been changes over time in this much larger scale of U.S. parents
relative to foreign affiliates? Some, but not much. A generation ago,
the share of U.S. parents in the worldwide activity of U.S.
multinationals was slightly higher than that cited above. In 1988, U.S.
parents accounted for 78.8% of U.S. multinationals’ worldwide
employment and 79.2% of their worldwide capital investment. So over the
past generation, the foreign-affiliate share of employment has risen by
an annual average about 0.5 percentage points, with a similar per-year
increase in investment share of about 0.3 percentage points.
Why has
the worldwide share of multinationals’ activity gradually shifted from
U.S. parents to foreign affiliates? As will be detailed in Chapter 4,
this shift has been driven by continued expansion of parents that was
outpaced by even faster expansion of affiliates, not by parent
contraction. For example, in 1988 U.S. parents employed just 17.7
million workers and undertook $177.2 billion in capital investment—just
81.6% and 40.0% of the respective 2006 U.S. parent totals underlying
Figure 1. The long-term trend has been for parents to continue growing
in the United States (which accounts for their steady shares of the
overall U.S. private sector documented above), but for affiliates to
grow even faster.
This faster affiliate expansion, in turn, has
largely reflected faster growth abroad in overall output and incomes
and thus in customers to be served. Recall the growth statistics from
introduction: from 1990 through 2008, growth in U.S. gross domestic
product averaged 2.7%—in contrast to 1990-2007 averages of 3.4% for the
overall world, 4.6% for emerging and developing countries as a whole,
6.3% in India, and a remarkable 9.9% in China.‡‡‡ Forecasts now abound
projecting when the world’s fast-growing economies will be larger than
the United States.
Thus, the correct reading of the data is
expanding business activity by both parents and affiliates as well. The
notion of a fixed amount of business activity being reallocated from
parents to affiliates is not borne out by
the facts.
C. Foreign Affiliates are Located Mostly in High-Income Countries, Not Low-Income Countries
Foreign
affiliates are located primarily in high-income countries that in many
ways have economic structures similar to the United States, not in
low-income countries. For example, in 2006 affiliates in high-income
countries accounted for 79% of total affiliate output—and a similar 90%
of output by all affiliates newly established or acquired in that year.
§ § § Figure 4 documents this fact by showing the share of selected
countries in total 2006 affiliate output (value added) of $995.6
billion.
TotalsFigure 4
High-Income Countries Account for the
Large Majority of Worldwide
liate Activity
These
average rates of growth of gross domestic product were calculated from
annual rates of GDP growth reported in International
Monetary Fund (2008), Tables A1-A4.
§
§ § Mataloni (2008); the country income classifications used there and
followed in this sub-section are constructed by the World Bank.
The
three countries that in 2006 accounted for the largest shares of
affiliate output were the United Kingdom (15.5%), Canada (11.5%), and
Germany (8.6%). China and India, despite their very fast overall GDP
growth of the past generation, respectively accounted for just 1.8% and
0.5% of total affiliate output. This concentration of affiliate
activity in other high-income countries is consistent with U.S.
multinationals expanding abroad mainly to gain global competitiveness
by serving foreign customers, a theme Chapter 3 explores in greater
detail.
It is true that affiliate activity is spreading from
high-income to low-income countries. For example, the latter’s share of
all-affiliate output rose by six percentage points from 1999 to 2006.
But like with the gradual shift from U.S. parents to overall foreign
affiliates discussed above, here, too, the shift in activity from
high-income-country affiliates to low-income-country affiliates has
been driven mainly by faster economic growth in the latter.
The
bottom line of this chapter is that the facts demonstrate that U.S.
multinationals make substantial contributions to the overall U.S.
economy. The magnitude of U.S. parent activities is very large—both
relative to the overall U.S. economy and relative to the scale of their
foreign affiliates—in ways that strengthen America’s productivity and
average standard of living.
It is often asserted that U.S.
multinationals are somehow “abandoning” the U.S. economy. Such claims
simply do not square with the facts.
Chapter 3 next explores how the
overall success of U.S. multinational companies depends increasingly on
their global competitiveness.








