AbstractUsing a large firm-level panel dataset for Japan, this paper examines the effects of the structure of supply chain networks on productivity and innovation capability through knowledge diffusion. We find that ties with distant suppliers improve productivity (as measured by sales per worker) more than ties with neighboring suppliers, which is likely because distant firms’ intermediates embody more diversified knowledge than those from neighboring firms. Ties with neighboring clients improve productivity more than ties with distant clients, which is likely because neighboring clients more effectively diffuse disembodied knowledge than distant clients. By contrast, ties with distant suppliers and clients improve innovative capability (a...
Over the last decade, increasing attention by practitioners has been matched by an increasing intere...
This paper investigates the unexplored aspects of network effects considering the position of strong...
Knowledge, emphasized by people progressively, had been treated as the most important resource in fi...
AbstractUsing a large firm-level panel dataset for Japan, this paper examines the effects of the str...
This article investigates the development of supplier-supplier innovations that occur when two firms...
This study investigates how knowledge diffusion occurs in a globally dispersed supply network, where...
Given the increasing significance of knowledge spillovers in innovation, this study investigates and...
Abstract Using industry-level R&D and patent data for a sample of 29 countries for the period 20...
Purpose: To explore the mechanism that shapes firms' supply chain learning (SCL) practices, this stu...
Firms operate in complex supplier-customer networks that potentially range over long distances. Howe...
This dissertation explores the effect of innovative knowledge transfer across supply chain partners....
Based on a novel dataset constructed with the supplier-consumer paired sample, this paper uses a dif...
Research Summary: We combine the absorptive capacity and social network theory approaches to predict...
This paper proposes a new mechanism linking innovation and networks in developing economies to ident...
This article studies the contribution of different channels of knowledge transfer on innovation outp...
Over the last decade, increasing attention by practitioners has been matched by an increasing intere...
This paper investigates the unexplored aspects of network effects considering the position of strong...
Knowledge, emphasized by people progressively, had been treated as the most important resource in fi...
AbstractUsing a large firm-level panel dataset for Japan, this paper examines the effects of the str...
This article investigates the development of supplier-supplier innovations that occur when two firms...
This study investigates how knowledge diffusion occurs in a globally dispersed supply network, where...
Given the increasing significance of knowledge spillovers in innovation, this study investigates and...
Abstract Using industry-level R&D and patent data for a sample of 29 countries for the period 20...
Purpose: To explore the mechanism that shapes firms' supply chain learning (SCL) practices, this stu...
Firms operate in complex supplier-customer networks that potentially range over long distances. Howe...
This dissertation explores the effect of innovative knowledge transfer across supply chain partners....
Based on a novel dataset constructed with the supplier-consumer paired sample, this paper uses a dif...
Research Summary: We combine the absorptive capacity and social network theory approaches to predict...
This paper proposes a new mechanism linking innovation and networks in developing economies to ident...
This article studies the contribution of different channels of knowledge transfer on innovation outp...
Over the last decade, increasing attention by practitioners has been matched by an increasing intere...
This paper investigates the unexplored aspects of network effects considering the position of strong...
Knowledge, emphasized by people progressively, had been treated as the most important resource in fi...