Behavioral theory of the firm;
Cross-border mergers and acquisitions;
Internal and external resources;
Open-systems view to organizations;
Organizational learning;
Organizational search;
ORGANIZATIONAL SLACK;
ENVIRONMENTAL MUNIFICENCE;
GEOGRAPHIC DISTANCE;
CULTURAL DISTANCE;
FIRM;
PERFORMANCE;
CORPORATE;
DETERMINANTS;
CONTEXT;
MODEL;
D O I:
10.1108/MBR-03-2017-0016
中图分类号:
F [经济];
学科分类号:
02 ;
摘要:
Purpose - The purpose of this study is to explain how factors relating to resource availability affect managerial risk-taking with regard to the geographic and institutional proximity of cross-border merger and acquisition (M&A) targets. The paper further considers the impact of organizational learning by testing the moderating effect of the acquiring firms' prior international M&A experience. Design/methodology/approach - This study uses linear regression with robust standard errors to account for dependence among clustered observations at the firm level. The authors used country and industry fixed-effects specifications to account for unobserved heterogeneity. Findings - The results suggest that when internal and external resources are more abundant, firms pursue cross-border M&As that are more geographically and institutionally distant. The findings further indicate that a firm's prior international M&A experience positively moderates the. aforementioned relationships. Research limitations/implications - Extending the behavioral theory of the firm beyond organizational slack resources, the results highlight the importance of taking a multi-level, open-systems perspective of the strategic impact of resource availability. The authors' theory and findings also provide a more nuanced view of the critical role organizational learning plays in the relationship between resource availability and organizational outcomes. Originality/value - This is the first study to the authors' knowledge that develops and tests a theoretical model exploring the impact of both internal (organizational slack) and external (environmental munificence at both the industry and home-country levels) resource availability, as well as prior organizational experience on an important multinational business practice.