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Multinational expansion of ASEAN firms: the role of technological, political and knowledge resources

机译:东盟企业的跨国扩张:技术,政治和知识资源的作用

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Purpose - The purpose of this study is to investigate the type of resources that firms draw on to expand internationally within the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) context. The authors seek to understand the impact of technological, political and knowledge resources on ASEAN firms' multinationality, moderated by labor intensity, the type of ownership and the stage of economic development. Design/methodology/approach - The hypotheses are tested on a sample that comprises 4,056 manufacturing firms in five ASEAN countries: Indonesia, Lao PDR, Philippines, Vietnam and Timor-Leste. Findings - The authors found that technology resource is not positively associated with multinationality. However, this relationship is moderated by labor intensity and type of firm ownership. Political resources, such as lobbying activities and informal payment to government, are important for ASEAN firms for foreign expansion. However, excessive informal payment may prove to be counterproductive. The authors also found that local firms tend to exploit more political resources than foreign counterparts and firms operating in the lower stage of economic development tend to spend more on lobbying activities, but pay less informal contribution. Finally, for the manager industry experience, they found an inverted U-shaped relationship with respect to multinationality, but for manager education, the association was unexpectedly negative. Practical implications - From a practical perspective, the findings have three important implications for management of ASEAN multinationals. First, multinationals can systematically exploit and internalize political ties by carefully integrating political activities, through informal contribution and lobbying, into their strategic planning or corporate structure. The findings suggest that political networking will offset weak technological resources, particularly for local firms. Second, managers of multinationals operating in ASEAN should not rely excessively on political actors, as the extra costs associated with the above optimum political resources exceed its marginal benefit. Moreover, excessive reliance on political actors will expose the firm to the threat of opportunism. Even though political resources are important managers need to maintain the utilization of political resources at the optimal level. Third, besides technological and political resources, managers' knowledge is also crucial for ASEAN firms' internationalization. The authors provide evidence showing that the positive effect of managerial experience is limited only to a certain level, even though tmanagers' education has positive linear relationship with multinationality. This implies that at the early stage of international activities, both manager's experience and education will have positive impact on the firm. However, when international activities are getting more complicated, the manager's education takes over the manager's experience. Above its optimum point, the manager's experience will limit the manager's capability to create innovative solutions for international expansion, and therefore it is the manager's education that is able to stimulate revolutionary solution. Originality/value - In this paper, the authors examine the resource impact on multinationality or the extent to which business activities span across national boundaries to shed light on the antecedents of foreign expansion in ASEAN. They discuss three types of resources (i.e. technological, political and knowledge resources) and seek to understand the impact of these resources on multinationality. Political resources are highlighted in addition to technological and knowledge resources in this paper because ASEAN firms are generally situated in a weak institutional environment in which the political resource is crucial for firms' entry, operation and exit in international markets (Boddewyn and Brewer, 1994; Hillman and Keim, 1995; Rodriguez el al., 2005).
机译:目的-这项研究的目的是调查公司在东南亚国家联盟(ASEAN)范围内向国际扩张所​​依赖的资源类型。作者试图了解技术,政治和知识资源对东盟企业跨国经营的影响,这些劳动受劳动强度,所有权类型和经济发展阶段的调节。设计/方法/方法-对假设进行了抽样检验,该抽样由五个东盟国家的4,056家制造公司组成:印度尼西亚,老挝,菲律宾,越南和东帝汶。调查结果-作者发现技术资源与跨国公司没有正相关。但是,这种关系受到劳动强度和公司所有权类型的控制。政治资源,例如游说活动和向政府的非正式付款,对于东盟公司进行海外扩张至关重要。但是,过多的非正式付款可能会适得其反。作者还发现,与外国同行相比,本地公司倾向于利用更多的政治资源,而经济发展处于较低阶段的公司倾向于在游说活动上花费更多,而非正式支出却较少。最后,根据经理行业的经验,他们发现与跨国公司之间存在倒U型关系,但是对于经理人教育,该协会出乎意料地是消极的。实际意义-从实践角度来看,调查结果对东盟跨国公司的管理具有三个重要意义。首先,跨国公司可以通过非正式的参与和游说将政治活动仔细地整合到其战略计划或公司结构中,从而系统地开发和内部化政治关系。调查结果表明,政治网络将弥补技术资源薄弱的问题,特别是对本地公司而言。第二,在东盟经营的跨国公司的管理人员不应过分依赖政治角色,因为与上述最佳政治资源相关的额外成本超过了其边际收益。此外,过度依赖政治行为者会使公司面临机会主义的威胁。即使政治资源很重要,管理人员也需要将政治资源的利用保持在最佳水平。第三,除了技术和政治资源,管理者的知识对于东盟企业的国际化也至关重要。作者提供的证据表明,即使管理人员的教育与跨国公司之间存在正线性关系,管理经验的积极作用也只限于一定水平。这意味着在国际活动的初期,经理的经验和教育都会对公司产生积极的影响。但是,当国际活动变得越来越复杂时,经理的教育将取代经理的经验。经理人的经验超过其最佳点,将限制经理人为国际扩张创造创新解决方案的能力,因此,经理人的教育才能激发出革命性的解决方案。原创性/价值-在本文中,作者研究了资源对多国性的影响或商业活动跨越国界的程度,以阐明东盟在国外扩张的前提。他们讨论了三种类型的资源(即技术,政治和知识资源),并试图了解这些资源对跨国公司的影响。在本文中,除了技术和知识资源外,还强调了政治资源,因为东盟公司通常处在薄弱的制度环境中,在这种环境中,政治资源对于公司进入,运营和退出国际市场至关重要(Boddewyn and Brewer,1994; Hillman和Keim,1995; Rodriguez等,2005)。

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