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Why Do Firms Divest?

Heather Berry ()
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Heather Berry: Management Department, The Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104

Organization Science, 2010, vol. 21, issue 2, 380-396

Abstract: In this paper, I examine how lower-cost production and new market opportunities influence the divestment decisions of firms. I argue that lower-cost production and new market opportunities in foreign markets can provide a better use of existing firm resources and posit that these opportunities are likely to influence firm divestment of home-country operations. The empirical results from a panel of 190 U.S. firms over a 20-year period (1981--2000) show that lower-cost production and new market opportunities influence the divestment decisions of firms. However, the results also reveal several interesting moderating influences on the hypothesized trade-offs and differences across the growth strategies of firms in low- and high-research and development intensive industries. By considering how and when investment in lower-cost production and new market opportunities impacts firm divestment decisions, this study examines divestment not only as a choice managers make when dealing with poor or struggling operations, but also as a response to better opportunities for firm resources in other markets. By focusing on the trade-offs managers make across product and geographic markets, this paper examines the role divestment can play in firm growth and expansion strategies.

Keywords: divestment; investment; corporate strategy; trade-offs (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2010
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (43)

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