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During the initial wave of globalization prior to the 1920s, Western multinationals made enormous investments in emerging countries.Deglobalization led to a drop in foreign direct investment (FDI) in developing nations, which has stayed below pre-1914 levels since the 1980s. The working paper demonstrates how context affected management methods in each historical time, resulting in a combination of opportunity and danger. During the first wave of globalization, multinational enterprises (MNEs) used government contracts and advantageous arrangements to get access to resources and establish operations. The main managerial problem was overcoming logistical barriers to export minerals and commodities into global value chains. During the Great Reversal, the biggest hurdles for MNEs were political. Firms should establish political relations with forceful host governments and reinforce their local identities, including localizing management. There was minimal need to alter products for highly protected markets or limited local competition. Liberalization and elimination of anti-foreign prohibitions have reduced political dangers in today's global economy. However, business strategy must carefully handle relationships with governments. MNEs in all industries now recognize the importance of emerging markets, particularly those in Asia and Latin America. They served as a manufacturing hub for lower-end global value chains, as well as a rapidly expanding market. There was an increasing need to integrate local relevance into global offerings and respond to local rivals.There is no consensus on when the current age of globalization began.The origins of this phenomenon may be traced back to the 1960s, when global financial markets emerged and challenged national prohibitions on money mobility.The new global economy may be traced back to China's embrace of market-oriented policies in 1978, rather than the political issues that led to deglobalization.China's economic success prompted other developing countries, particularly India, to follow suit by 1991.The rise of right-wing, free market administrations in Britain and the United States in 1979 and 1980, as well as the demise of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s, paved the way for global capitalism and foreign investment.In the 1990s, the World Wide Web and the digital age accelerated globalization.
Ashika Yadav (Mon,) studied this question.