“…Their competitive advantage primarily resided in their generally small size, which gave them the flexibility to adapt products to local market conditions and domestication; thus, they could use local inputs and capital conservation by employing labor-intensive production methods rather than capitalintensive production methods. These EM MNEs exported their product down the "pecking order" to other emerging markets (Wells, 1977(Wells, , 1983, leading scholars to describe EM MNEs as either having no real FSAs at all (Rugman, 2009) Lee et al, 2016a;Liang et al, 2012;Nguyen & Rugman, 2015;Sutherland et al, 2017). However, as noted by Wells (1983) and Lall (1983a) in the late 1960s and early 1970s, possessing the advantage of ownership is not sufficient on its own for EM MNEs to exploit their advantages abroad (Lall, 1983a;Wells, 1983;Yiu, Lau, & Bruton, 2007).…”