BADM 531: Survey sampling: General techniques and Special population
Slides by Minjae Lee, BADM 545 Fall 2013
description
Transcript of Slides by Minjae Lee, BADM 545 Fall 2013
Market frictions as building blocks of an organization economics approach to strategic
managementMahoney and Qian, 2013 SMJ
Slides by Minjae Lee, BADM 545 Fall 2013
Overview
A wider recognition of the role of market frictions is useful to
Identify an evolving market-frictions paradigm in strategic management
Show how two primary questions in strategy and three primary strategic goals can be better joined and evaluated Why firms exist and why some firms outperform others Cost minimization, value creation, and value capture
Generate new research questions and advance theory development in the strategic management field
Overview
An evolving market-frictions logic can serve as a common language
Three strategic goals are often intertwined and a framework that simultaneously consider these three goals is likely to be more relevant for management practice and to be more fruitful for richer theory development
Pairwise joining of these theories suggests the presence of logical coherence, but does not fully reveal the fundamental commonalities among all these theories.
Develops the market-friction logic Identifying the concept of market-frictions
through first fundamental welfare theorem of economics
Taking a Stock: Market-frictions logic
Taking a Stock: Market-frictions logic
Economic consequences of a particular combination of market frictions
Organizational economics approach to cost minimization
Transaction costs theory
Opportunism, Asset specificity Uncertainty
Taking a Stock: Market-frictions logic
Organizational economics approach to value creation
Resource-based approach (Value creation) Valuable: luck and/or asymmetric information Rare: asymmetric information about the economic value
of those resources / resources that are created by a firm (spillover)
Heterogeneity: asymmetric information, causal ambiguity, and asset specificity/uniqueness
Complementarity: positive inter-project spillovers, such as economies of scope & positive inte-temporal spillovers, such as asset accumulation or interconnectedness over time
Taking a Stock: Market-frictions logic
Organizational economics approach to value creation Resource-based approach (Value Sustainability)
Low transferability: information asymmetry between sellers and buyers, tacitness and intangibility, difficulties in partitioning, isolating mechanisms such as patent and trademark enforcement
Inimitability: interfirm externalities, intra-firm spillovers, and asymmetric information
Non-substitutability:
Real options theory uncertainty in investment decisions, the (in)flexibility in
strategic choice, and the inter-project as well as inter-temporal spillovers
Taking a Stock: Market-frictions logic
Taking a Stock: Market-frictions logic
Organizational economics approach to value capture
Resource-based approach Complementarity: asset specificity Embeddedness: interconnectedness of resources
Property rights theory Poorly or undefined property rights Imperfection in residual control assignments can
lead to poor resource allocation
Building on the same fundamental logic, each theory branches out by emphasizing different but overlapping combinations of market frictions to address its canonical problem.
Taking a Stock: Market-frictions logic
Recent developments in organization economics approach
Considering more than one strategic goal has already enabled greater theory development
Cost minimization coupled with value creation. Intra-firm spillovers and governance inseparability
=> Transaction cost theory => Dual role of governance structure and Interaction between goals
Intra-firm spillovers and economies of scale/scope when economies of scope or technical complementarity
are combined with intra-firm spillovers and market frictions
Recent developments in organization economics approach
Cost minimization coupled with value capture
Property rights theory
Asset specificity and negative inter-firm externalities
Asset specificity and loss of positive intra-firm spillovers
Recent developments in organization economics approach
Value creation coupled with value creation.
Poorly or undefined property rights and capabilities with value creation potential
Asset specificity and positive intra-firm spillovers
Focusing on the concept of market friction as the key unit of analysis may prove useful in explaining the two primary questions
Generalized market-frictions approach
One example Alchian and Demsetz (1972)
Due to nonseparability problem, ex ante free-riding (shirking) and ex post haggling can occur. Hierarchical monitoring is suggested as a solution to this problem
Rajan and Zingales (1998) build upon the nonseparability of team production and join
it with the market friction of asset specificity Contrary to the recommendations by property rights
theory, assigning ownership to that team member may reduce incentives in firm-specific investment by all team members, including the one that is assigned ownership
use the property rights mechanism of restricted access to critical assets, instead of ownership
Market-frictions logic enables us to explore the intertwined relationships between the economic rents question and the organizational boundary decision, instead of treating these two questions in isolation
Organization boundary decision can be further examined through a value creation and value capture lens via learning, dynamic capabilities, and knowledge spill-in Kang et al.(2009)
Generalized market-frictions approach
Using the market-frictions logic First approach is to start with the research gap
identified within the existing literature
Second approach is to start with the strategic phenomenon of interest