2015
DOI: 10.14254/2071-789x.2015/8-4/6
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Large Enterprise Branches: the Case of the Czech Republic

Abstract: ABSTRACT. Importance of largest enterprises is steadily augmenting. In contrast to small-and middle-sized firms, their large counterparts influence individual territorial economies with much higher intensity. The Czech Republic, which represents an object of the article, is a country, where big companies traditionally played a relevant role. While headquarters of large enterprises have been subject to several solid analyses, an attention devoted to their first-tier affiliates is far from sufficient. In order t… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Final collocation of enterprises naturally reflects a large bulk of interplays between above mentioned supply and demand sides. In contrast to general economic categories, supply and demand we deal with bear a distinct spatial dimension (Aksoy, Marshall 1992;Markusen 1985;van Dijk, Pellenbarg 1999;Shephard, Barnes 2003;Johnston et al 1994;Yserte et al 2016;Ascani et al 2016;Suchacek 2015or Vanhove, Klaasen 1987.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Final collocation of enterprises naturally reflects a large bulk of interplays between above mentioned supply and demand sides. In contrast to general economic categories, supply and demand we deal with bear a distinct spatial dimension (Aksoy, Marshall 1992;Markusen 1985;van Dijk, Pellenbarg 1999;Shephard, Barnes 2003;Johnston et al 1994;Yserte et al 2016;Ascani et al 2016;Suchacek 2015or Vanhove, Klaasen 1987.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Cross-border cooperation is limited by asymmetry at the level of the economic development of the neighboring countries, particularly relating to the borderland areas in which the states functioned in market economy systems and centrally controlled systems in the not too distant past [11][12][13]. An example of the variability of the economic structures is the Euroregion of the Baltic area, which is an institutionalized form of cross-border cooperation in the south-easterly region of the Baltic Sea.…”
Section: Features Of Internationalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The barrier to cross-border cooperation (see: Table 1) is that of the incohesive systems of technical and economic infrastructure shaped in the past, e.g., the differentiated width of railway tracks, the quality of roads, the lack of motorways that restricts transit traffic, particularly in mountainous areas. With regard to the technical barriers to regional cooperation, it is necessary to indicate the insufficiently developed communication network, the banking infrastructure, while also tourist and telecommunications infrastructure in the post-communist countries [13,15]. It is first and foremost essential to build the transit routes, while also extend the existing routes and build new border crossing routes.…”
Section: Features Of Internationalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several quantitative and qualitative regional indicators (see e.g. Sucháček, 2015) are processed by different mathematical, statistical or econometric methods. Several groups of methods can be identified: univariate statistical methods (e.g.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%