To engage or not to engage with host governments: Corporate political activity and host country political risk

Senior managers of multinational enterprises often examine when and how to engage, or not to engage, with host governments. We argue that senior managers are likely to choose to evade engagement with a host government when they perceive high host country political risk, not only through public political risk ratings, but also via their home and host government relations. We show that this choice can require senior managers to lead active adaptation through four strategies: low visibility, enabling the MNE to operate under the radar of host governments; rapid compliance, entailing high speed actions to obey the rules; reconfiguration, involving rearranging the MNE’s structure and processes for competitiveness; and anticipation, implying the prediction of public policy and analysis of interest groups to anticipate responses.

Published Date
20 May 2025

Written By
Kamel Mellahi, Maria A. De Villa, Tazeeb Rajwani, Thomas C. Lawton

Article Type
Journal Article Video Abstract

Topics
Global Strategy

Interest Group
Global Strategy IG

Content Source
Global Strategy Journal