拉丁美洲的商业团体不同吗?探索性的国际政治经济学视角

IF 2.2 4区 管理学 Q3 BUSINESS
M. Carney, S. Estrin, Z. Liang, Daniel Shapiro
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的本研究旨在推进国际政治经济学(IPE)的观点,即地缘政治事件会对国家及其企业产生长期的影响。该研究还旨在探索这样一种观点,即共同的政治历史和地理结合起来,创造特定的结构条件,塑造一个地区所有企业的国际竞争力。特别是,作者考虑了1823年的门罗主义(Monroe Doctrine)是否有助于在整个拉丁美洲(LA)建立制度结构,影响到今天所有公司的战略。门罗主义主张美国在西半球的影响力。作者还以LA企业集团的当代国际竞争力为例,阐述了IPE视角。设计/方法论/方法作者以洛杉矶企业集团的当代国际竞争力为例,阐述了IPE的观点。本研究的探索性框架引出了一个关于拉丁美洲企业集团附属公司出口绩效的命题。作者使用新兴经济体32000家公司的公司级绩效数据,在控制替代解释的同时,实证探索这一命题。为了做到这一点,作者借鉴了世界银行的经济调查结果。作者提出了一个命题,认为门罗主义对洛杉矶的经济政策制定产生了长期影响,对企业的国际竞争力产生了普遍、持续和负面的影响。作者发现了强有力的一致证据,表明就出口业绩而言,所有拉丁美洲公司的出口都较少,集团附属公司的表现也不如独立公司。这一发现与世界上所有其他新兴市场地区的结果形成了对比。研究局限性/含义本研究的主要贡献是提出了共享区域地缘政治历史和地理在解释企业层面结果方面的潜在重要性。然而,这项研究是初步的和介绍性的,尽管作者试图控制对结果的其他国家具体解释。该分析考虑了一种特定的IPE现象,门罗主义,在一个特定的地点:洛杉矶的影响。未来的工作应该寻求将洛杉矶与其他地缘政治安全和替代IPE结构进行对比。他们也可能从历史的角度来处理时间维度:洛杉矶的印记是由门罗主义安排的长度驱动的吗?实践意义最重要的管理学学习点涉及地理和政治经济因素对跨国企业战略形成的相关性。人们普遍认为,背景是子公司业绩的重要决定因素,制定战略时需要考虑到特定国家的特点,最重要的是新兴经济体和体制安排的特点。本文提出,管理人员还需要考虑IPE结构,包括安全安排,并考虑由此产生的区域和国家背景。社会影响分析表明,不仅包括象征性企业在内的企业的绩效,而且它们可能产生的社会效益溢出效应,都取决于地区和国家特征。因此,大多数新兴经济体的企业集团都能产生更好的业绩,并提供更高水平的社会影响,包括ESG目标。然而,这项研究的结果表明,前者对LA来说并不正确,作者认为,这是门罗主义印记的结果。需要进一步的工作来确定后一种效果是否也不真实,但如果是这样,那么可能需要制定针对区域的政策来解决由此产生的企业社会短缺问题。独创性/价值核心思想是,地缘政治事件可以对国家及其企业产生持久的影响:共同的政治历史和地理位置创造了特定的结构条件,塑造了一个地区所有企业的国际竞争力。作者参照门罗主义探讨了这一概念,询问其对美国在美洲影响力的断言是否有助于在洛杉矶建立影响所有公司战略的制度结构。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are Latin American business groups different? An exploratory international political economy perspective
Purpose This study aims to advance an international political economy (IPE) perspective that geo-political events can have long-lasting imprint effects on countries and their firms. The study also aims to explore the idea that shared political history and geography combine to create specific structural conditions that shape the international competitiveness of all firms in a region. In particular, the authors consider whether the Monroe Doctrine of 1823, which asserted American influence in the Western Hemisphere, contributed to the creation of institutional structures across Latin America (LA) affecting the strategies of all firms to this day. The authors also illustrate the IPE perspective using the example of the contemporary international competitiveness of LA business groups. Design/methodology/approach The authors illustrate the IPE perspective using the example of the contemporary international competitiveness of LA business groups. The exploratory framework of this study leads to a proposition about the export performance of Latin American business group affiliates. The authors use firm-level performance data for 32,000 firms across emerging economies to explore the proposition empirically while controlling for alternative explanations. To do this, the authors draw on the World Bank Economic Surveys. Findings The authors derive a proposition that argues the Monroe Doctrine has had a long-run imprint effect on economic policymaking in LA, resulting in a common, persistent and negative impact on the international competitiveness of firms. The authors find strong and consistent evidence that in terms of export performance, all Latin American firms export less and group affiliates do not outperform independent firms, This finding contrasts with the results for all the other emerging market regions around the world. Research limitations/implications The main contribution of this study has been to suggest the potential importance of shared regional geopolitical history and geography in explaining firm-level outcomes. However, this study is preliminary and introductory, although the authors seek to control for alternative country-specific explanations of the results. The analysis considers the effects of one particular IPE phenomenon, the Monroe Doctrine, in one particular location: LA. Future work should seek to contrast LA with other geopolitical security and alternative IPE structures. They might also address the time dimension from a historical perspective: is imprinting in LA driven by the length of the Monroe Doctrine arrangements? Practical implications The most important managerial learning point concerns the relevance of geography and political economy factors for multinational enterprises strategy formation. There is widespread understanding that context is an important determinant of subsidiaries’ performance, and that strategies need to be constructed to take account of country-specific characteristics, most importantly, in emerging economies and institutional arrangements. This paper proposes that managers also need to take account of IPE structures, including security arrangements, and to consider the resulting regional as well as national context. Social implications The analysis suggests that not only the performance of firms, including emblematic firms, but also the socially beneficial spillovers that might be generated from them, are contingent on the regional as well as national characteristics. Thus, business groups in most emerging economies are found to yield better performance and to provide higher levels of social impact, including concerning ESG goals. However, the findings of this study suggest that the former is not true for LA, which, the authors argue, is a consequence of imprinting as a result of the Monroe Doctrine. Further work is needed to establish whether the latter effect is also not true, but if that is the case, then regionally specific policies may be required to address the resulting corporate social shortfalls. Originality/value The core idea is that geo-political events can have long-lasting imprint effects on countries and their firms: that shared political history and geography create specific structural conditions that shape the international competitiveness of all firms in a region. The authors explore this concept with reference to the Monroe Doctrine, asking whether its assertion of US influence across the Americas contributed to the creation of institutional structures across LA affecting the strategies of all firms to this day.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
14.80%
发文量
15
期刊介绍: Multinational Business Review publishes high quality and innovative peer-review research on the strategy, organization and performance of multinational enterprise (MNE), international business history, geography of international business, and the impact of international business on economic growth and development. The journal encourages papers that are cross-disciplinary in nature, and that address new and important issues in international business. Multinational Business Review also promotes research on under-represented regions such as Africa, Central and Eastern Europe, Latin America, and South East Asia and their MNEs, as well as under-studied topics such as the role of trade, investment and other public policies. Specific topics of interest include innovation and entrepreneurship in an international context; corporate governance and ownership; social, environmental and political risk; the role of multilateral institutions; and the nature of emerging market multinationals. The title seeks strong conceptual studies, contributing to the advancement of theories and frameworks, and sound empirical work, whether qualitative or quantitative, suggesting managerial, economic or government policy recommendations. The journal encourages replication studies that contribute to our understanding of the reliability and validity of current knowledge. Finally, Multinational Business Review welcomes proposals for perspectives pieces that offer critical and challenging viewpoints; surveys of the literature particularly those that use new and innovative bibliometric methods; and special issues on topics of relevance to Multinational Business Review.
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