Managing Mergers Across Borders: A Two-Nation Exploration of a Nationally Bound Administrative Heritage
Michael Lubatkin,
Roland Calori,
Philippe Very and
John F. Veiga
Additional contact information
Michael Lubatkin: University of Connecticut, Box U41M, 368 Fairfield Road, Storrs, Connecticut 06269-2041, and Groupe EM Lyon, 69132 Ecully Cedex, France
Roland Calori: Groupe EM Lyon, 69132 Ecully Cedex, France
Philippe Very: Groupe EM Lyon, 69132 Ecully Cedex, France
John F. Veiga: University of Connecticut, Box U41M, 368 Fairfield Road, Storrs, Connecticut 06269-2041
Organization Science, 1998, vol. 9, issue 6, 670-684
Abstract:
Top managers of British and French firms, which were recently acquired by either British or French firms, were surveyed as to their perceptions of the administrative approach—reflected in integrating mechanisms—used by the acquiring firms to establish headquarters-subsidiary control. Four types of integrative mechanisms were examined: structural, systems, social, and managerial. A multiple analysis of covariance model, coupled with a two-nation (British and French), two-merger type (domestic, cross-national) sampling design, found evidence that the administrative approaches used by managers during merger integration from two nations partially reflect their different heritages, and that these differences are consistent with national differences and the theoretical perspectives of institutional development and cross-cultural studies. Our findings, while exploratory, provide insight into the administrative difficulties of managing across borders and help us understand why many cross-national firms continue to use ethnocentric approaches in spite of the incentives for adopting a transnational approach. Moreover, our findings add one more voice to a growing chorus calling for a theory of the firm, as embedded, institutionally, culturally, and historically.
Keywords: Administrative Heritage; Mergers; Cross-cultural; Universalist Perspective (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1998
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (35)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:inm:ororsc:v:9:y:1998:i:6:p:670-684
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