Multinational Corporations (MNCs) usually set up production where it is close to the markets, where there is skilled and unskilled labour available at low costs and where the availability of other factors of production is assured. MNCs also might look for government policies that look after their interests. Having assured themselves of these conditions, MNCs set up factories and offices for production. At times they set up production jointly with some of the local companies of these countries. They provide money to these local companies for additional investments like buying new machines for faster production. They also buy up local companies and then expand production. MNCs with huge wealth can quite easily do so. There is another way in which MNCs control production. Large MNCs in developed countries place orders for production with small producers. The products are supplied to MNCs, which then, sell these under their own brand names to the customers. Thus, we see that there are a variety of ways in which the MNCs are spreading their production and interacting with local producers in various countries across the globe.