State-Owned Enterprises as Global Competitors
A Challenge or an Opportunity?
An estimated 22% of the world’s largest firms are now effectively under state control,
this is the highest percentage in decades. These firms are likely to remain a prominent
feature of the global marketplace in the near future. The upsurge of state-owned enterprises
(SOEs) as global competitors has given rise to concerns related to a level playing
field. Some business competitors and observers claim that preferential treatment
granted by governments to SOEs in return for public policy obligations carried out
at home can give SOEs a competitive edge in their foreign expansion. The OECD has
taken a multidisciplinary approach, looking at the issue from the competition, investment,
corporate governance and trade policy perspectives. The report aims to sort fact
from fiction, and develop a stronger understanding, based on empirical evidence, on
how to address growing policy concerns with regard to SOE internationalisation. The
report concludes that although there is no clear evidence of systematic abusive behaviour
by SOE investors, frictions need to be addressed, in view of keeping the global economy
open to trade and investment.
Published on December 08, 2016