Lo, Frias, & Ghosh 2012
Abstract
Question: How the capability-based perspective of the resource-based view of the firm can be integrated with the comparative-governance approach of transaction cost economics to shed light on governance issues in interfirm relationships
Argument:
Transacting parties create value not only through the employment of partner-specific investment and coordination activities
but also through the employment of heterogeneous, firm-specific resources that each firm brings to the relationship and that, in turn,
governance structures reflect a discriminating alignment with these two distinct forms of value-creating activities and resources
Context:
Industrial original equipment manufactures employing branded components are agreed upon (more fixed) ex-ante versus negotiated (more flexible) ex-post
Insight
1) The chosen governance form reflects a trade-off between safeguarding and adaptation motives even among parties engaged in cooperative relationships # Trade-off
2) Valuable, firm-specific resources that preexist outside of the exchange relationship are at stake in these cooperative yet contractually incomplete relationships # Resource outside
Trade-off + Resource outside + Resource specific investment and activities -> Governance design
Introduction
* An overview on branded component contracts
- Relational features
- Value creation
* Flexibility in price determination mechanism
- Fixed, predetermined prices
- Price redetermination
- Price renegotiation
* Hypotheses
- Creating value by fostering adaptation
- Claiming value through securing safeguards
* Research context
- In-depth pilot interviews
- Data collection
- Measures
- Measure validity
* Results
- Additional investigation
* Discussion