The export performance of emerging economy firms: The influence of firm capabilities and institutional environments
The export performance of emerging economy firms: The influence of firm capabilities and institutional environments
We advance a two-stage theoretical model which contends that the export performance of emerging economy firms (EEFs) will depend both upon their firm-specific capabilities and their home institutional environments. Specifically, we argue that EEFs will be more likely to export when facing more uncertainty at home from greater political instability, substantial informal competition, and high corruption. Furthermore, we hypothesize that firms’ export intensities will be contingent upon specialized internal capabilities such as a skilled workforce, top managerial experience, and access to external technologies. We test these hypotheses using a dataset of more than 16,000 firms from the four BRIC economies (i.e., Brazil, Russia, China and India). Our results confirm that political instability and informal competition have robust effects on the export propensity of EEFs, whilst export intensity is contingent upon the availability of skilled workers and access to external technologies via licensing.
218-230
Krammer, Marius
24ce872e-5044-4846-bb35-88e12c74c854
Strange, Roger
6f7b0a47-0014-4242-ad02-f3476a75322f
Lashitew, Addisu A.
1fcb6c8d-08d0-49aa-a95f-4ab0a9837523
5 December 2017
Krammer, Marius
24ce872e-5044-4846-bb35-88e12c74c854
Strange, Roger
6f7b0a47-0014-4242-ad02-f3476a75322f
Lashitew, Addisu A.
1fcb6c8d-08d0-49aa-a95f-4ab0a9837523
Krammer, Marius, Strange, Roger and Lashitew, Addisu A.
(2017)
The export performance of emerging economy firms: The influence of firm capabilities and institutional environments.
International Business Review, 27 (1), .
(doi:10.1016/j.ibusrev.2017.07.003).
Abstract
We advance a two-stage theoretical model which contends that the export performance of emerging economy firms (EEFs) will depend both upon their firm-specific capabilities and their home institutional environments. Specifically, we argue that EEFs will be more likely to export when facing more uncertainty at home from greater political instability, substantial informal competition, and high corruption. Furthermore, we hypothesize that firms’ export intensities will be contingent upon specialized internal capabilities such as a skilled workforce, top managerial experience, and access to external technologies. We test these hypotheses using a dataset of more than 16,000 firms from the four BRIC economies (i.e., Brazil, Russia, China and India). Our results confirm that political instability and informal competition have robust effects on the export propensity of EEFs, whilst export intensity is contingent upon the availability of skilled workers and access to external technologies via licensing.
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Accepted/In Press date: 10 July 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 19 July 2017
Published date: 5 December 2017
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 497712
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497712
ISSN: 0969-5931
PURE UUID: 32a382b6-6c73-4ab3-b51c-d2e11f39e46a
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Date deposited: 29 Jan 2025 18:41
Last modified: 01 Feb 2025 03:19
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Author:
Marius Krammer
Author:
Roger Strange
Author:
Addisu A. Lashitew
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