학술논문

A Stunt, A Shut-Down, and Heavy Diplomatic Propaganda: The Story of Curtiss-Wright Corporation's Penetration to the Turkish Market
Document Type
journal article
Zeitschriftenartikel
Source
Studia Politica: Romanian Political Science Review, 20, 1, 87-105
Subject
Wirtschaft
Economics
Aviation industry
foreign direct investment
National Economy
Volkswirtschaftstheorie
bilateral relations
aircraft industry
direct investment
economic relations
diplomacy
Turkey
United States of America
aircraft
Luftfahrzeug
Wirtschaftsbeziehungen
bilaterale Beziehungen
Flugzeugindustrie
USA
Diplomatie
Direktinvestition
Türkei
10500
Language
ISSN
1582-4551
Abstract
This article analyzes Curtiss-Wright Aerospace Industry’s inflow process to the Turkish market in the early 1930s. In these years, aviation was a quite significant industry that contributed economic, military, and political prestige of the states. Progressive decision-makers of Turkey were looking for an opportunity to establish a partnership with a multinational company to manufacture its own aircraft because the young state was destitute of such technology. Curtiss-Wright was eager to do business in Turkey; two American pilots’ record-breaking flight from New York to Istanbul in 1931; withdraw of German Junkers Aerospace Industry’s from Turkey in 1929 and American Ambassador Joseph Grew’s public diplomacy between 1927 to 1932, helped this process.