The underdetermined knowledge-based theory of the MNC
Anders Fransson,
Lars Håkanson and
Peter W Liesch
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Anders Fransson: UQ Business School, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
Lars Håkanson: 1] UQ Business School, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia[2] Department of International Economics and Management, Copenhagen Business School, Copenhagen, Denmark
Peter W Liesch: UQ Business School, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia
Journal of International Business Studies, 2011, vol. 42, issue 3, 427-435
Abstract:
In this note we revisit two core propositions of the knowledge-based view of the firm found in the seminal work of Kogut and Zander: (1) that multinational corporations (MNCs) exist because transfers and re-combinations of knowledge occur more efficiently inside MNCs than between MNCs and third parties; and (2) that the threat of opportunism is not necessary, although it may be sufficient, to explain the existence of the MNC. Their knowledge-based view shifted the conceptualization of the firm from an institution arising from market failure and transaction costs economizing to a progeny of superior knowledge governance. We question these conclusions, arguing that firms are but one of the many types of “epistemic communities” possessing and nurturing procedural norms, identity, and the cognitive, linguistic and reflexive attributes conducive to efficient exchange and re-combination of knowledge among their members. Important insights may be gained by applying the concept of epistemic communities implicit in the knowledge-based perspective beyond firm-level hierarchies.
Date: 2011
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