This paper develops hypotheses concerning the role of entry mode and experience-based organizational learning as determinants of the r&d intensity of foreign affiliates and tests these hypotheses on a sample of 420 japanese manufacturing affiliates abroad. Entry mode has a major impact on r&d activities: the r&d intensities of acquired affiliates substantially exceed those in wholly owned greenfield affiliates, while the r&d intensities of minority owned ventures are higher if japanese parent firms lack strong r&d capabilities at home. For greenfield operations, support is found for an incremental growth pattern of foreign r&d as a function of organizational learning and affiliate capability building. The results are...
R&d in foreign affiliates and technology transferred from their parent firms are important poten...
This paper develops an explanation for the mode and sequence of entry that firms select for their in...
The institutional approach treats organizational forms and behaviour as contingent upon institutions...
This paper develops hypotheses concerning the role of entry mode and experience-based organizational...
This paper develops hypotheses concerning the role of entry mode and experience-based organizational...
This paper develops hypotheses concerning the role of entry mode and experience-based organizational...
In order to compete successfully in a foreign market, a firm must possess ownership advantages that ...
This research was conducted as part of a project on Japanese economic growth undertaken by the Econo...
Intra-firm Technology Transfer and R&D in Foreign Affiliates: Substitutes or Complements? Eviden...
Intra-firm Technology Transfer and R&D in Foreign Affiliates: Substitutes or Complements? Evidence f...
This paper investigates both the determinants and the impact of over-seas subsidiaries ’ R&D act...
This paper investigates the causes of R&D activities of overseas subsidiaries using firm-level panel...
Despite extensive research, the literature is unclear about the circumstances under which a firm lea...
This paper examines patent and overseas subsidiary data of 231 large and medium-sized Japanese elect...
This study investigates the role of learning from failures and how learning from failure of others s...
R&d in foreign affiliates and technology transferred from their parent firms are important poten...
This paper develops an explanation for the mode and sequence of entry that firms select for their in...
The institutional approach treats organizational forms and behaviour as contingent upon institutions...
This paper develops hypotheses concerning the role of entry mode and experience-based organizational...
This paper develops hypotheses concerning the role of entry mode and experience-based organizational...
This paper develops hypotheses concerning the role of entry mode and experience-based organizational...
In order to compete successfully in a foreign market, a firm must possess ownership advantages that ...
This research was conducted as part of a project on Japanese economic growth undertaken by the Econo...
Intra-firm Technology Transfer and R&D in Foreign Affiliates: Substitutes or Complements? Eviden...
Intra-firm Technology Transfer and R&D in Foreign Affiliates: Substitutes or Complements? Evidence f...
This paper investigates both the determinants and the impact of over-seas subsidiaries ’ R&D act...
This paper investigates the causes of R&D activities of overseas subsidiaries using firm-level panel...
Despite extensive research, the literature is unclear about the circumstances under which a firm lea...
This paper examines patent and overseas subsidiary data of 231 large and medium-sized Japanese elect...
This study investigates the role of learning from failures and how learning from failure of others s...
R&d in foreign affiliates and technology transferred from their parent firms are important poten...
This paper develops an explanation for the mode and sequence of entry that firms select for their in...
The institutional approach treats organizational forms and behaviour as contingent upon institutions...