董事社会资本和财务资本对公司连锁形成的差异影响

N. Harrigan, M. Bond
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引用次数: 7

摘要

本章使用BPNet软件(PNet软件的一个版本,Wang, Robins, & Pattison, 2009)对澳大利亚公司联锁数据集进行建模,使用二部指数随机图模型(ERGM)(见第10章)。通过使用二分模型,我们能够直接检验长期以来在社会学文献中讨论的相互依存关系。也就是说,我们可以将社会纽带的形成(公司连锁)作为以下因素的函数来研究:(1)个人属性(董事),(2)群体属性(公司),(3)个人和群体属性的相互作用,以及(4)纯粹的结构性网络效应(不参考行动者属性而形成的社会关系)。我们的主要实质性目标是研究董事特征对公司连锁形成模式的影响。我们特别感兴趣的是三种类型的公司董事权力对企业连锁形成的影响:(1)物质或金融资本(即财富),(2)专属商业男子俱乐部的会员资格,以及(3)精英私立学校的出勤情况。传统的精英和公司连锁研究倾向于强调董事社会资本的统一作用,以及董事、公司、社会和经济权力在公司社区顶点的许多维度的收敛。我们认为,在企业社区中,许多不同形式的社会和经济权力的目的和影响存在相当大的差异。特别是,我们认为物质资本利益的可让与性(Coleman, 1990/1994)导致所有者相对不太重视自己的社会资本(如连锁)。我们还认为,商人俱乐部和精英私立学校,传统上被视为上层社会成员的标志和企业团结的促进者,在澳大利亚企业界扮演着不同的角色:我们假设商人俱乐部将社会资本(Putnam, 2000, 22 - 24)与集团内社会资本联系在一起,将那些具有共同利益和身份的公司联系在一起,而私立学校则充当桥梁社会资本,提供集团之间的社会资本,将企业社区的不同部分聚集在一起,在利益和身份的基础上,由私立学校联系起来的企业集团几乎没有区别。此外,我们在方法论上做出了三个贡献。首先,我们证明了存在纯粹的结构性网络效应,它在公司连锁上运行,独立于董事和公司的经济、政治和社会学属性。在这方面,我们正在寻找类似于我们称之为“路径闭合”(Robins, Pattison, & Wang, 2009)或“传递性”(Granovetter, 1973;Holland & Leinhardt, 1976;Watts & Strogatz, 1998),以及其他影响,如“受欢迎程度”(Barabasi & Albert, 1999;弗兰克和施特劳斯,1986;Wasserman & Pattison, 1996),其中关系的形成纯粹是对构成当地社区的关系模式的回应。在二部网络的情况下,我们期望发现诸如3-路径(L3)关闭并成为4-循环(C4)的趋势,以及受欢迎的导演变得更受欢迎的趋势(用各种大小的明星配置建模)。其次,在模型拟合和社会学解释力方面,我们证明了将董事和公司属性引入二分模型的额外好处。我们对政治捐赠、上市、外资所有权、受监管行业和营业额等公司属性的影响进行了建模。我们模拟了董事属性的影响,如个人财富、商人俱乐部成员和精英私立学校的教育程度。最后,我们探讨了在特定类型之间增加或减少董事形成可能性时,包含互动效应的好处。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Differential Impact of Directors’ Social and Financial Capital on Corporate Interlock Formation
This chapter models an Australian corporate interlock data set with a bipartite exponential random graph model (ERGM) (see Chapter 10) using the BPNet software, a version of the PNet software (Wang, Robins, & Pattison, 2009) for bipartite data. By using bipartite modeling, we are able to directly examine the interdependence long talked about in the sociological literature. That is, we are able to study social tie formation (corporate interlocks) as a function of (1) the individuals’ attributes (directors), (2) the groups’ attributes (corporations), (3) the interaction of individual and group attributes, and (4) purely structural network effects (social ties that form without reference to actor attributes).Our primary substantive objective is to study the effects of director characteristics on the pattern of corporate interlock formation. In particular, we are interested in the effects of three types of corporate director power on the formation of corporate interlocks: (1) physical or financial capital (i.e., wealth), (2) membership of exclusive business men’s clubs, and (3) attendance at elite private schools.Traditional elite and corporate interlock studies have tended to emphasize the unifying role of director social capital and the convergence of the many dimensions of director, corporate, social, and economic power at the apex of the corporate community. We argue that there is considerable differentiation in the purpose and effects of the many different forms of social and economic power within the corporate community. In particular, we argue that the alienability of the benefits of physical capital (Coleman, 1990/1994) leads owners to place relatively low emphasis on their own social capital (e.g., interlocks). We also argue that business men’s clubs and elite private schools, traditionally viewed as markers of upper-class membership and facilitators of corporate unity, play different roles within the Australian corporate community: we hypothesize that business men’s clubs are bonding social capital (Putnam, 2000, 22– 24) closer to in-group social capital, binding those corporations with common interests and identities, whereas private schools act as bridging social capital, providing between-group social capital, drawing together the disparate parts of the corporate community, with little differentiation on the basis of interests and identities of corporate groups united by private school ties.In addition, we make three methodological contributions. First, we demonstrate that there are purely structural network effects that operate on corporate interlocks, independent of the economic, political, and sociological attributes of directors and corporations. In this, we are looking for effects similar to the one-mode effects we call “path closure” (Robins, Pattison, & Wang, 2009) or “transitivity” (Granovetter, 1973; Holland & Leinhardt, 1976; Watts & Strogatz, 1998), and other effects such as “popularity” (Barabasi & Albert, 1999; Frank & Strauss, 1986; Wasserman & Pattison, 1996), in which ties form purely in response to the pattern of ties that comprise the local neighborhood. In the case of bipartite networks, we expect to find effects such as a tendency for 3-paths (L3) to close and become 4-cycles (C4), and a tendency for popular directors to become more popular (modeled with star configurations of various sizes). Second, we demonstrate the added benefits, both in terms of model fit and sociological explanatory power, of introducing director and corporation attributes into bipartite modeling. We model the effects of corporate attributes such as political donations, public listing, foreign ownership, regulated industries, and turnover. We model the effect of director attributes such as individual wealth, members of business men’s clubs, and education at elite private schools. Finally, we explore the benefit of the inclusion of interaction effects for the increased or decreased likelihood of directorship formation between particular types.
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