Human Capital between Generalists and Specialists: How Does It Impact Innovation?

KwangJoo Koo
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

While human capital theory and upper echelon theory predicts that a firm should innovate better when its CEO possess more human capital, this relationship has been difficult to measure empirically. As a result, little is known about the part that individual CEO plays in explaining innovation performance. In this paper, using a unique dataset on S&P 500 CEO human capital between 1996 and 2003, I examine whether the CEO specific human capital having a critical firm expertise or science expertise affects firm innovation. This paper aims to empirically explore the effects of science specific human capital and firm specific human capital on innovation efficiency. My findings support the idea that CEOs that gather more specific human capital promote better innovation for the firm. I also find that science-specialists CEOs promote innovation performance than firm-specialists CEOs and generalists CEO. My analyses indicate that both types of human capital do matter in the context of innovation. I offer an alternative view of how intangible special human capital promotes firm outcomes by comparative advantages.
通才和专才之间的人力资本:如何影响创新?
虽然人力资本理论和上层理论都预测CEO拥有越多的人力资本,企业的创新能力就越强,但这种关系难以实证衡量。因此,人们对CEO个人在解释创新绩效方面所起的作用知之甚少。本文利用1996 - 2003年标准普尔500指数公司CEO人力资本数据集,考察了具有关键企业专业知识或科学专业知识的CEO特定人力资本是否会影响企业创新。本文旨在实证探讨科技特有人力资本和企业特有人力资本对创新效率的影响。我的研究结果支持这样一种观点,即聚集了更多特定人力资本的ceo能促进公司更好的创新。我还发现,科学专家CEO比企业专家CEO和通才CEO更能促进创新绩效。我的分析表明,这两种类型的人力资本在创新的背景下都很重要。我提供了另一种观点,说明无形的特殊人力资本是如何通过比较优势促进企业成果的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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