>>29307104Owning a corporation in /nasfaqg/ just means having access to the famous NASFAQ exchange and participating in the impossibly competitive environment of /nasfaqg/.
In this case though, it's more so a /nasfaqg/ company having a stake in you.
The obvious benefits are: increased influx of capital and expertise, meaning faster economic growth of a region. Presence of specific corporations will affect areas and populations differently, so it's important to know whom you are dealing with. For example, Tripoint specializes in data analysis and modelling and keeps a large foray of experts working for it, which would facilitate megaprojects related to it, since for example geologists or world-class engineers would be far more available.
The drawbacks are usually regional destabilization and erosion of local political power. The former comes from the 'shadow wars' plutocrats wage against one another, while the latter comes from inviting an external power structure on top of the existing one. Other than that, again, some corporations have unique drawbacks. To use Tripoint as an example, it has a rigorous meritocratic and performance-based structure that can create shining diamonds, but also complete mental burn-outs in the local educated population.
A lot of those drawbacks or benefits can change or be moderated by the country's approach to a /nasfaqg/ corporation. For example, /morig/ essentially relinquished control of one city to Tripoint, making their interests aligned. They have embraced the decreased control over an area, but in return got a prosperous city and a high-utility "ally".
>>29308066I suppose that depends. You can learn more about Tripoint here:
https://rentry.org/tripoint-cooperativeIt tends to heavily draw on the local population and laws, so the business model/structure is quite adaptable and could be local.
I'd see two major possibilities: either a local chartered company that'd be a subsidiary of Tripoint but operate only in /who/, or simply allowing a company like Delta Holdings or Triangle Consulting to invest into smaller local businesses and support them in return for a percentage of ownership, an 'angel investment' scheme.