MNC

MNC

MNC


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Cartes-fiches 141
Langue English
Catégorie Gestion d'entreprise
Niveau Université
Crée / Actualisé 08.05.2016 / 08.05.2016
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Network perspective of the MNC

  • Multi centered organisations: Not only order taking
  • Ressources and capabilities all over the organization
  • Subs can take strategic roles (also own internationalization)
  • Synergies between subs
  • Biderectional flows instead of unidirectional flows (products, capital)
  • Horizontal relations between subs
  • Innovation is decentralized
  • formal structures get complemented by informal coordinations
    • Innovation in any subsidiary
  • The responsibility of specific foreign units extends the host country

MNC as network

  • boarders inside and outside are clear
  • different levels of corporate embeddedness (product flows, knowledge flows, coordination)

Inter-organizational networks

  • Cooperation with other independent companies
  • local network of the foreign subsidiaries
    • Market as networks: Network of relations
    • Not only market relations (universitites etc.)
    • different degree of external embededdedness (dependency on Role of subsidiary)

Why is a dual perspective necessary?

  • Boarders in the network are blury, not easily defined
  • Neo-institutionalism
    • Implies mutual behavior by organisations
  • Contingency approach: Organizations choose between internal & external match achieving

Why is a MNC a differentiated network?

  • Horizontal linkages between subsidiaries
  • Differentiated HQ-subsidiary relationships

Variation of subsidiaries

  • Age
  • Size
  • Success
  • Value-added activities (Marketing, distribution, production)
  • Motives for existence (market-, resource-seeking)
  • Available resources
  • External environment
  • Degree of power relationships

Why do firms exist?

Neoclassical Theory

  • Firm is a black box
    • Produces only for outsiders
    • Input factors of production are transformed into an output of finished goods
    • uniform inputs into uniform outputs

Transaction Cost approach

Firms choose the level of vertical integration that minimizes the transaction cost

Production cost vs. transaction cost

Production cost:

  • costs of transforming inputs into outputs
  • dependent on production functions, independent of the form of organizations

Transaction costs:

  • cost of economic exchange
  • externally and internally (cost of organizing internal echange)

Transaction cost in decision making (Theory)

  • Internalize activities that can be carried out cheaper than externally
  • Firms will expand until the transaction costs of the market are less than the transactions costs within the firm

Why do MNCs exist?

  • Because it is more efficient to internalize certain cross-boarder activities than to carry them out via market
  • Previous theories: Secure monopoly situations across boarders and to reduce competition

Types of transaction costs

Ex ante:

  • Search/Information costs
  • Bargaining cost

Ex post

  • Monitoring costs
  • Enforcement costs (Durchsetzung)
  • Adjustement costs

Impact of transaction costs in decision making across boarders

Sales:

  • Higher transaction costs with independent intermediary vs. foreign sales subsidiary

Production:

  • Higher transaction costs with independent supplier vs. foreign production subsidiary

Basic assumptions to TCA

Bounded rationality

  • People have limited capabilites to act rational
  • limited information
  • limited information processing capabilities
    • impossible to have full contracts

Basic assumptions to TCA

Opportunism

  • People act in a self-interested way
  • People are not entirely honest and thruthful
  • People take advantage of unforeseen circumstances that give them chance to exploit another party

Normal conditions of transaction costs

  • Market governance of transaction is more efficient than vertical integration
  • Competitive pressure makes transaction partners conform to contracts

Which characteristics raise transaction costs and lead to market failure?

  • Frequency
  • Uncertainty
  • Specificity (most important)

Frequency

Enhances the tendency for vertical integration, because the overhead costs for hierarchical governance will be easier to recover for recurring transactions

Uncertainty

  • Unpredictable ex ante (environmental uncertainty)
  • No verification ex post (behavioral uncertainty)

Specificity

  • transaction-specific assets are assets that are tailored to a particular transaction and cannot be easily redeployed outside the relationship of the parties to the transaction (-->lock in effect)

Transaction cost

Know-How

 

  • Transferring know-how is inefficient across markets
    • information asymmetry leads to intransparency
    • revealing all information already transfers his know-how to the buyer free of charge
    • internalizing the "markets for know how" by exploiting the market yourself is a solution to market failure

Transaction cost

Reputation

  • Reputation gained by a company (in country A) can be exploited (in country B)
  • free-riding is a main problem with exploiting reputation externally
    • franchising might be used to exploit reputation
    • Internalizing could reduce free-riding

Transaction cost

Raw material and components

 

In markets with small numbers:

"small numbers bargaining" could lead to market failure f.Ex. in the case of asset specificity

Transaction cost

Distribution and Marketing

  • Physical (warehouses etc.) and intellectual (sales persons)
  • Can be small or large and specific
  • "Small numbers bargaining" (high retailing concentration)
  • seldom activities might be infrequent or frequent

Critiques to the transaction cost approach

  • Opportunistic behaviour is often too negative (people also fulfill their contract as supposed)
  • TCA could lead to recommendations of control, that are necessary
  • Opportunistic behaviour as self fulfilling prophecy-->leads to negative attitude
  • Organisations have the opportunity to develop a coherent context which reduces opportunism
  • Long-lasting relationships could become more expensive if the behaviour of the partner is opportunistic
  • TCA is neglecting the potential of different partners: competive advantages by internationalization
  • TCA is neglecting production costs
    • Specializiation of partners reduces transaction costs

Resource-based view

Sustained competitive advantage and long-term success of companies stems from a heterogeneous distribution of valuable resources between firms

Possible decision questions in the Resource-based view

  • How to exploit its resources to gain optimal rents?
  • How do I expand & develop my resource base? (Intern: Core competencies External: acquisitions)
  • Should I cooperate to complement my resources? How far are my resources in danger when I cooperate?

Two definitions of resources

  • Assets which are tied semipermanently to the firm
  • All assets (Information, knowledge) that enable the firm to conceive of and implement strategies that improve efficiency

Categories of resources

  • Physical capital: equipment, geographic location, access to raw material
  • human capital: training, judgement, intelligence
  • organisational capital: formal structures, formal planning, controlling

Which characteristics are a must-have for resources to be a base for a competitive advantage?

  • Valuable
  • Rare
  • Imperfectly imitable or not tradeable
  • Cant be strategic equivalent substitues that are valuable but not rare or not imperfectly imitable

Why do other firms not imitate those resources?

  • Path dependency as  reason
    • ability of a firm to obtain a resource is dependent upon unique historical conditions
  • Causal amiguity as reason
    • If its not clear which resource is relevant for the competitive advantage, others cannot imitate it
  • Social complexity as reason
    • resources are tied into a complex social structure (company culture and reputation)
    • It is not clear how to develop these resources

Knowledge-based view

(Development within the RBV)

  • Knowledge as the resource
  • Does not reduce its value by using it, rather enhances it
  • firms compete on the creation, development of their knowledge

Basic assumptions of the knowledge-based view

  • Companies are bundles of knowledge (protected learning areas)
  • Firms are social communities that specialize in the creation and internal transfer of knowledge
    • Knowledge transfer is considered costly (difference to TCA)
    • Knowledge transfer more effective internally (richer options for transfer mechanism)

Definition of Knowledge

Knowledge is a recipe describing how activites are carried out

Types of knowledge

  • Individual vs. organizational
  • Explicit vs. tacid/implicit knowledge

-->tacid knowledge: difficult to capture, built by long-lasting learning process

-->explicit knowledge: patent, franchise

  • Location-bound vs. non-location-bound

Sender of knowledge

  • Motivation to send knowledge--> Is there an incentive to transfer knowledge?
  • Crediblity of the source

Receiver of Knowledge

  • Motivation to accept knowledge and to integrate it
  • Absorptive capacity of the organization
    • Learning is faster the more knowledge is already available

Knowledge and company growth strategies

Cooperative/Hierarchical strategies

  • Need for complementary knowledge
  • Knowledge as a power base in cooperative arrangements
  • value reduction of existing knowledge by transfer to partner
  • Outsourcing, where internal development is necessary or where internal knowledge base is not sufficient as base for further learning

Knowledge and company growth strategies

Existing knowledge base as restriction for growth

  • Limits growth opportunities
  • Diversification only in "close industries" (overlapping knowledge)
  • Internationalisation into markets with low "distance" (cultural, market structure)
  • Inertia (Trägheit) in company strategies

Resource dependency theory

  • Companies exchange resources with their environment, they need external resources to survive (companies as open systems)
    • can be supply side (like critical components) or market side (market access via retailer)
    • creates dependencies from other organisations
    • creates a risk for the company
    • relationships between HQ and its subsidiaries are considered
  • RDT highlights the situations in which resource dependency is strong and unproblematic as well as strategies to minimize risk
  • Power based theory
    • Political solutions considered important