Multidomestic competition refers to situations where:
A. no domestic companies have very large market shares and each national market has many competitors.
B. competition in one national market is independent of competition in other national markets, and as a consequence, there is—strictly speaking—no "international or world market."
C. domestic rivals pursue focused or market niche strategies and do not compete internationally.
D. domestic companies have a competitive disadvantage in competing with foreign rivals that operate in many different countries.
E. most competitors operate in more than 2 country markets but rarely in more than 20.
Answer: competition in one national market is independent of competition in other national markets, and as a consequence, there is—strictly speaking—no "international or world market."