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Interfirm networks : organization and industrial competitiveness PDF

334 Pages·1999·3.122 MB·English
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Interfirm Networks ‘This will almost surely become a standard reference on business analysis.’ Nicholai Foss, Copenhagen Business School A wide range of economists and policy-makers are now aware that there is a distinct correlation between the economic success of a country or region and that unit’s capacity to develop networks of relatively high-trust relationships among firms. This has drawn deserved attention to this organizational form. Interfirm Networks examines the nature of such networks and their role in promoting industrial competitiveness. Where previous work in this area has tended to be purely descriptive rather than analytical, the distinguished contributors to this volume present a balanced, theoretical and empirical approach to interfirm networking drawing on a variety of international case studies. Issues covered in Interfirm Networks: Organization and Industrial Competitiveness include: • the role of networks in regulating conflict and producing cooperation • the role of networks in developing knowledge and competences • network governance and conflict intensive networks Students and researchers working on industrial and managerial economics, as well as those in business in general will find this an indispensible resource on the role of contemporary interfirm networks. Anna Grandori is Professor of Organization and Management, University of Modena and Bocconi University, Milan. Routledge Studies in Business Organizations and Networks 1 Democracy and Efficiency in the Economic Enterprise Edited by Ugo Pagano and Robert Rowthorn 2 Towards a Competence Theory of the Firm Edited by Nicolai J. Foss and Christian Knudsen 3 Uncertainty and Economic Evolution Essays in honour of Armen A. Alchian Edited by John R. Lott Jr 4 The End of the Professions? The restructuring of professional work Edited by Jane Broadbent, Michael Dietrich and Jennifer Roberts 5 Shopfloor Matters Labor-management relations in twentieth-century American manufacturing Davd Fairris 6 The Organisation of the Firm International business perspectives Edited by Ram Mudambi and Martin Ricketts 7 Organizing Industrial Activities Across Firm Boundaries Anna Dubois 8 Economic Organization, Capabilities and Coordination Edited by Nicolai Foss and Brian J. Loasby 9 The Changing Boundaries of the Firm Explaining evolving interfirm relations Edited by Massimo G. Colombo 10 Authority and Control in Modern Industry Theoretical and empirical perspectives Edited by Paul L. Robertson 11 Interfirm Networks Organization and industrial competitiveness Edited by Anna Grandori 12 Privatization and Supply Chain Management Andrew Cox, Lisa Harris and David Parker 13 The Governance of Large Technical Systems Edited by Olivier Coutard 14 Managing the New Product Supply Chain An industrial organization perspective Michael Schwartz Interfirm Networks Organization and Industrial Competitiveness edited by Anna Grandori London and New York First published 1999 by Routledge 11 Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada by Routledge 29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001 This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2001. © 1999 Anna Grandori for selection and editorial matter; individual contributors for their contributions All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Interfirm networks: organization and industrial competitiveness / edited by Anna Grandori. p. cm. — (Routledge studies in business organization and networks; 15) Includes bibliographical references and index. 1. Business networks. I. Grandori, Anna. II. Series. HD69.S8158 1999 658.4´095–dc21 98-33131 CIP ISBN 0–415–20404–6 (Print Edition) ISBN 0-203-02248-3 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-17228-0 (Glassbook Format) Contents List of Tables and Figures vii List of Contributors ix Introduction 1 ANNA GRANDORI Interfirm networks: organizational mechanisms and economic outcomes PART 1 Differentiated interests, coordination mechanisms and fairness outcomes 1 The rules of the game in industrial districts 17 SEBASTIANO BRUSCO 2 The fairness properties of interfirm networks 41 ANNA GRANDORI AND MASSIMO NERI 3 Inside partnership. Trust, opportunism and cooperation in the European automobile industry 67 ERHARD FRIEDBERG AND JEAN-PHILIPPE NEUVILLE PART 2 Differentiated competences, coordination mechanisms and learning outcomes 4 The dynamic efficiency of networks 91 BART NOOTEBOOM 5 Interorganizational relations in the Modena biomedical industry: a case study in local economic development 120 ANDREA LIPPARINI AND ALESSANDRO LOMI vi Contents 6 Industry clusters as commercial, knowledge and institutional networks: opto-electronics in six regions in the UK, USA and Germany 151 CHRIS HENDRY, JAMES BROWN, ROBERT DEFILLIPPI AND ROBERT HASSINK 7 Organizational learning and the role of the network broker in small-firm manufacturing networks 185 KEITH G. PROVAN AND SHERRIE E. HUMAN 8 Dangerous liaisons: sharing knowledge within research and development alliances 208 PAUL B. DE LAAT PART 3 The externalities of networks 9 The costs of networked organization 237 PETER SMITH RING 10 Credit rationing among small-firm networks in the London and New York garment industries 263 ANDREW GODLEY 11 The dark side of dense networks: from embeddedness to indebtedness 276 GIUSEPPE SODA AND ALESSANDRO USAI 12 Japanese interfirm networks:‘high trust’ or ‘relational access’? 303 MARK J. SCHER Index 319 Tables and Figures Tables 5.1 The relational subsets 133 5.2 Centrality measures for each relational subset 135 6.1 Firms by size, age, industry level, ownership and start-up pattern in six regions 158 7.1 Network, firm and respondent descriptive characteristics 190 7.2 Organizational learning within SME networks 192 7.3 Roles and emphases of the network broker for organizational learning 201 11.1 Porter’s five forces model applied to the construction industry in Italy 282 11.2 Betweeness centrality of Italian general contractors 287 12.1 Characteristics of the insider–outsider continuum 314 12.2 Coordination mechanism modes 315 Figures 4.1 Degree of integration 94 4.2 Options for covering fixed costs 101 4.3 Cycle of learning 104 4.4 Cycle of (dis)integration 110 5.1 Competencies, size and basic connections among players in the Modena biomedical industry 129 5.2 The Modena biomedical industry: total relationships 136 5.3 The Modena biomedical industry: exchange of raw materials 137 5.4 The Modena biomedical industry: the use of subcontracting 138 5.5 The Modena biomedical industry: exchange of components and parts 139 5.6 The Modena biomedical industry: exchange of finished products 140 5.7 Average degree centrality by classes of firms’ age (dataset TOT_REL) 141 viii Figures 5.8 Average degree centrality by classes of firms’ size (dataset TOT_REL) 141 5.9 Average degree centrality by classes of firms’ age (dataset RAW_MAT) 142 5.10Average degree centrality by classes of firms’ size (dataset RAW_MAT) 143 5.11 Average degree centrality by classes of firms’ age (dataset COM_PART) 143 5.12Average degree centrality by classes of firms’ size (dataset COM_PART) 144 6.1 Five sets of factors for analysing the emergence and role of clusters in opto-electronics 155 6.2 Relative importance of the local, national and international networks 168–169 7.1 Alpha-net perception of competition among sample firms 196 7.2 Beta-net perception of competition among sample firms 197 9.1 Costs associated with economic exchange 240 11.1 The whole network of consortia among Italian general contractors 286 11.2 Relationship between performance and relational capital 288 11.3 The vicious circle of costs and negative externalities 293 11.4 The public works market 1987–1995 297 11.5 Average profitability rate of the top 100 construction companies in Italy from 1984 to 1993 297 11.6 Total amount of net profits (or losses) of the top 100 construction companies in Italy from 1984 to 1993 298 12.1 Kigyo shudan–keiretsu power relationships—a three- dimensional view 310 12.2 Interfirm relations: trust—power/control matrix 312 12.3 R-dimension: relational access insider–outsider continuum 315 Contributors Anna Grandori is Professor of Organization and Human Resource Management and Head of the Business Administration Department at the Economics Faculty, University of Modena; and Professor of Methods of Organization and Management Research at Bocconi University, Milan. Massimo Neri is Research Fellow at the University of Modena, Department of Business Administration. His research has focused on organizational justice as applied to a variety of organization analysis and design problems. Erhard Friedberg is Senior Researcher at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Paris, Director of the Centre de Sociologie des Organisations (CSO), and Director of the Doctoral Program in Sociology at the Paris Institute of Political Science (IEP). Jean-Philippe Neuville is Assistant Professor of Sociology at the National Institute for Applied Sciences (Lyon) and Research Associate at the Center for the Sociology of Organisations (Paris). Bart Nooteboom is Professor of Industrial Organization at the School of Management and Organization at Groningen University, the Netherlands. His research interests have been entrepreneurship, innovation and diffusion, technology policy, transaction cost theory, interorganizational relations and learning. Andrea Lipparini PhD teaches at the University of Bologna and at the Catholic University in Milan. His research interests lie in the areas of interorganizational relationships and organizational competencies. Alessandro Lomi is a member of the Strategy and Organization Group at the School of Economics of the University of Bologna. His main research interests include social network analysis, ecological models of organizations and simulation models of social processes. Chris Hendry is Centenary Professor in Organisational Behaviour at City University Business School, London. School, London.

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