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Joanna Tyrowicz

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Joanna Tyrowicz Limits of an enterprise Institutional Economics But I thought you were going to talk about econometrics?! Two minutes on transaction cost ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Joanna Tyrowicz


1
  • Joanna Tyrowicz
  • Limits of an enterprise

Institutional Economics
2
But I thought you were going to talk about
econometrics?!
  • Two minutes on transaction cost economics (TCE)
    and the theory of the firm
  • Capabilities/competencies and theory of the firm
  • Intersection of competencies and TCE
  • Problem solving perspective
  • New perspectives and new questions
  • Correcting for endogeneity
  • Bringing the market inside the firm
  • Example of research truck transport industry in
    US
  • Conclusions

3
What do we think about an enterprise?
  • Behavioral assumptions
  • Actors want to be rational but there are limits
  • Boundedly rational
  • Actors attempt to be far-sighted
  • Actors may behave opportunistically
  • Asset specificity is the big locomotive
  • Investments that produce cost savings or quality
    benefits for a one or small number of potential
    customers (quasi-rents)
  • Frequency and uncertainty also matter
  • Main focus is on ex post maladaptation problems
  • Hold-up
  • Underinvestment
  • Measurement issues are implicated
  • Fundamental (intertemporal) transformation alters
    exchange from market to bilateral monopoly

4
Comparative assessment of discrete structural
alternatives
Governance Mode Governance Mode Governance Mode
Market Hybrid Hierarchy
Instruments
Incentive intensity
Administrative Controls
Contract Law
Performance Attributes
Adaptation (A)
Adaptation (C)
strong, semi-strong, 0 weak, Williamson (1996, 103) strong, semi-strong, 0 weak, Williamson (1996, 103)
0
0
Classical Neoclassical
Forbearance
0
0
5
Alignment of discrete alternatives
Market
Hybrid
Hierarchy
Governance Costs
Market
Hybrid
Hierarchy
k1
k2
Asset Specificity
6
A Wiliamsonian firm
Vertically Integrate
Core of the Firm
Complex Contract
Simple Contract
7
Implications for firm performance
  • Main predictions
  • Vertically integrate in response to deep
    co-specialization
  • Hybrid in response to moderate levels of
    co-specialization
  • Market in response to low levels of
    co-specialization
  • Aligning transactions in an economizing way
    yields superior firm performance (profitability,
    survival)
  • Firms presumably invest in asset specificity
    because it creates value
  • Capabilities/competences
  • What are capabilities?
  • How do capabilities arise?
  • What is the capabilities-based theory of the
    firm?
  • How do capabilities influence firm performance?

8
What are capabilities?
  • Capabilities dynamic capabilities competences
  • Knowledge-based view of the firm (KBV)
  • Resources KH (tradedable), financial or
    physical assets, HC.
  • Capabilities the capacity to deploy resources.

9
What are capabilities?
  • Main assumptions Bounded rationality ltgt
    knowledge is sticky.
  • Two views
  • Myopic view
  • Passive spillovers from tacit and endogenous
    learning-by-doing processes.
  • Path-dependent evolutionary process.
  • Largely informal processes of accumulation.
  • Farsighted view
  • Deliberate and sustained investment of financial
    and managerial resources generate capabilities.
  • Largely formal processes of accumulation.

10
What is the KBV theory of the firm?
  • Theory of firm derives from knowledge-based
    considerations
  • not the incentives, opportunism, and transaction
    costs
  • hierarchy is a creator of a positive not only
    an avoider of a negative.
  • Main prediction internalize activities that can
    be carried out at lower (production) cost than
    other firms
  • Dynamic transaction costs gt teaching is costly
  • Internalize those activities that rely on core
    competencies
  • Firms economise on the exchange of knowledge not
    on opportunism.
  • Two competing claims
  • Hierarchy economizes on knowledge transfer
  • Authority avoids the need to transfer knowledge
  • Hierarchy facilitates knowledge transfer
  • Shared language and identity facilitate transfer
  • Capabilities lead to firm heterogeneity

11
How do capabilities influence firm performance?
  • Capabilities yield superior profitability/survival
    .
  • Different capabilities likely to yield different
    marginal benefits.
  • Invest in capabilities that yield the greatest
    marginal returns to investment.
  • Should KBV assumptions omit opportunism?
  • What is the unit of analysis?
  • How can competencies be operationalised?
  • What are the deficiencies of hierarchy?
  • KBV fails to predict when hierarchies supplant
    markets and vice-versa.
  • What is the theory of value?
  • Which competencies are valuable?
  • Which competencies should be invested in?
  • How does KBV apply to entrepreneurship?

12
Williamsons (1999) response
  • Generic
  • How do alternative generic modes compare for
    purposes of organization transaction X?
  • Williamsons traditional theory is capability
    neutral.
  • Particular
  • How should firm A, with its pre-existing
    strengths and weaknesses (i.e., competencies),
    organize transaction X?
  • Williamson (1991) made provision for pre-existing
    capabilities.

13
Accounting for pre-existing capabilitiesThe
shift parameter
Market
Hybrid
Hierarchy
Governance Costs
Positive capabilities reduce sum of
transaction and production costs.
k1
k2
Asset Specificity
14
Further refinement opportunities
  • Fixed niche
  • How do the pre-existing competencies of Firm A
    compare to rivals with respect to market niche
    a1?
  • Variable niche
  • How do the pre-existing competencies of Firm A
    compare with rivals with respect to many niches?
  • Repositioning
  • How should firm A, with its competencies,
    reposition for the future in relation to its
    strategic situation?
  • Strategising
  • If firm A possesses monopoly power, how can it
    best deter and discipline actual and potential
    rivals?

15
Nagging concerns
  • Need a theory of value for further refinements.
  • Which transactions should managers choose?
  • What guidance do we have for generating and using
    knowledge/capabilities?
  • How are capabilities created?
  • How does TCE apply in a knowledge economy?
  • Is the transaction the best unit of analysis
    when thinking about knowledge?
  • How should knowledge be organized inside the
    firm?
  • PROBLEM SOLVING PERSPECTIVE

16
What is the Problem Solving Perspective?
  • Knowledge-based objectives of a manager and
    choosing problems to solve.
  • Solution landscapes and complexity
  • Different ways to search landscapes for solutions
  • Knowledge formation hazards
  • Alternative governance structures
  • Markets
  • Authority-based hierarchy
  • Consensus-based hierarchy
  • Discriminating alignment

17
Problem-solving perspective (PSP)
  • Focuses on the creation of new knowledge.
  • Uses a comparative governance logic.
  • Assume bounded rationality and opportunitsm.
  • Predicts not only firm boundaries but also
    alternative internal organizational structures
    (discriminating alignment logic).
  • Competencies are generated from the theory.
  • Makes explicit provision for path dependence.
  • Utilizes a unit of analysis new to TCE.
  • Potentially informs choice of problems.
  • Relates to an entrepreneurial theory of the firm.

18
Knowledge-based objectives of a manager
  • Choose problems with potential solutions high in
    value.
  • Organize to optimize likelihood, speed, and cost
    with which valuable solutions are discovered.
  • Appropriate a portion of the solutions value.
  • Set aside (3), focus on (2) for different types
    of (1).
  • Solution landscapes
  • Innovative solutions to complex problems arise
    from recombinations of existing
    technology/knowledge.
  • Solution landscape Set of all possible
    combinations of relevant existing knowledge.
  • Terrain of landscape changes with interdependency
    of knowledge sets.
  • Value of the global maximum rises but average
    peak declines as interdependency increases.

19
Dimensionalizing solution landscapes
  • Decomposable problems
  • value of solutions depends very little on the
    interaction among knowledge setslow interaction.
  • Nearly decomposable problems
  • value of solutions depends somewhat on the
    interaction among knowledge setsmoderate
    interaction.
  • Non-decomposable problems
  • value of solutions is highly dependent on
    interaction among knowledge setshigh interaction.

20
Low complexity solution landscapesDecomposable
problem
Solution Value
Knowledge Set B
Knowledge Set A
21
Moderate complexity solution landscapeNearly
decomposable problem
Solution Value
Knowledge Set B
Knowledge Set A
22
High-complexity Solution LandscapeNon-decomposab
le Problem
Solution Value
Knowledge Set B
Knowledge Set A
23
How can we find a high peak?
  • Search is uncertain Central issue is the pattern
    of trials to undertake.
  • Pr(val.sol.)0 if problem complex and trial
    choice random.
  • Directional search
  • Expected value of a particular trial is
    determined by reference to one or more nearby
    trials.
  • Heuristic search
  • Expected value of a trial depends on developing
    heuristics about knowledge set interaction.
  • Bounded rationality and distributed knowledge
    makes heuristic search more costly than
    directional search.

24
Efficiently searching solution landscapes
Relative benefit of trial ordering and selection
by problem type
Attributes of Knowledge Formation Attributes of Knowledge Formation Attributes of Knowledge Formation
Decomposable Nearly Decomposable Non-decomposable
Trial Ordering and Selection Mechanism
Directional Search
Heuristic Search
0
0
25
Three organizational archetypes
  • Markets the use of contracts
  • Hierarchy
  • Authority-based hierarchy (ABH)
  • Vertical communication and codes
  • Design rules
  • Direction to subordinatesmanager orders trials
  • Consensus-based hierarchy
  • Horizontal communication and codes
  • Commonality of goal
  • Group decision makinggroups order trials

26
Markets
  • Hayekmarkets are a marvel for transferring
    knowledge.
  • Instruments support directional not heuristic
    search.
  • High-powered incentives to specialize and exploit
    knowledge.
  • Weak supports for investments in knowledge
    sharing or language to facilitate knowledge
    sharing.
  • Weak conflict resolution (classical contract law)
    over trial ordering.
  • Markets are efficient for decomposable problems
    but fail as landscapes become increasingly
    complex.

27
Authority-based hierarchy
  • Demsetzauthority serves to economize on the
    transmission and handling of knowledge.
  • Instruments moderately support directional and
    heuristic search.
  • Low-powered incentives attenuate knowledge
    appropriation hazard.
  • Supports vertical (not horizontal) communication
    channels and codes to facilitate central figure
    acquiring, accumulating, and applying knowledge
    to guide search.
  • Conflict resolution through authority dampens
    strategic knowledge accumulation hazard.
  • ABH is efficient for nearly decomposable problems.

28
ABH failure
  • ABH fails for non-decomposable problems because
  • central figure can not acquire, accumulate, and
    apply requisite knowledge to develop necessary
    heuristics.
  • it does not support horizontal communication
    channels.
  • central figure contaminates trial ordering due to
    meddling.
  • ABH fails for decomposable problems because
  • number of knowledge sets is beyond managers
    cognition.
  • central figure contaminates trial ordering due to
    meddling.
  • weak incentives limit specialized knowledge
    formation.
  • excessive costs of knowledge sharing.

29
Consensus-based hierarchy
  • Arrowconsensus utilizes specialized knowledge
    sets housed within the firm and can substitute
    for authority.
  • Consensus arises when knowledge transfer is
    inexpensive and actors have an overriding
    commonly valued purpose.
  • Instruments support heuristic not directional
    search.
  • Low-powered incentives attenuate knowledge
    appropriation hazard.
  • Supports horizontal communication channels and
    codes (and commonly valued purpose) for knowledge
    sharing.
  • Conflict resolution through social relations,
    which attenuates strategic knowledge accumulation
    hazard.
  • CBH is efficient for non-decomposable problems.
  • CBH fails for problems with moderate to low
    complexity because
  • of excessive costs of maintaining communication
    channels.
  • social attachments may misguide and bias search.
  • social attachments may limit the firms capacity
    to absorb new forms of knowledge and hence lead
    to inferior solutions.

30
Comparative assessment of alternatives
Governance Mode Governance Mode Governance Mode
Hierarchy Hierarchy
Market ABH CBH
Instruments
Incentive intensity
Communication codes and channels
Dispute resolution regime
Performance Attributes
Directional search
Heuristic search
0 0
0 Vertical Horizontal
Contract law Authority Relational
0
0
31
Discriminating alignment of Governance
alternatives
Market
ABH
CBH
Expected cost of finding a valuable solution
Market
ABH
CBH
K1
K2
Complexity
Holding N constant
32
Discussion about PSP
  • Instead of explaining why firms exist, PSP
    explains when firms exist and in what form
  • PSP reconciles contradictory knowledge-based
    explanations for the firms
  • PSP is based on probabilistic assessment of
    solution discovery, so
  • aligning governance does not guarantee discovery
  • serendipity is possible
  • multiple valuable solutions are possible and
    continuing search depends on a cost benefit
    analysis
  • Implicitly and wrongly assumes successively
    chosen problems independent
  • Extant knowledge sets within firm shape problem
    choice
  • knowledge development and protection a concern
  • not currently considered in our governance choice
    logic
  • While PSP focuses on a single problem, impetus
    for path dependence is inherent in model
  • Boundaries may change in response to problems
    chosen
  • Problems have their life-cycles
  • Change problems or change knowledge and
    organization

33
Does PSP add value?
  • Criticisms of KBV and TCE
  • Is opportunism considered?
  • Is the unit of analysis operational?
  • Can it account for capabilities?
  • Can competencies be operationalized?
  • How are capabilities created?
  • Is learning accounted for?
  • Is value creation considered?
  • Are deficiencies of hierarchy described?
  • Is there a discriminating alignment?
  • Which transactions are undertaken?
  • Does in inform entrepreneurship?
  • Which competencies are valuable?
  • Does it unpack path dependence?
  • KBV TCE PSP
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0 0
  • 0
  • 0

34
How to assemble and organise knowledge?
Firm Boundary
Opportunity cost of acquiring knowledge
Joint- ventures
Complex contracting
Consensus- based hierarchy
Authority- based hierarchy
Simple contracting
Problem complexity
35
Example US truck transport industry
  • Paper by Hamilton and Nickerson (ASQ)
  • Compare LT and LTL, for-hire trucks in US
  • How they differ
  • LTL hub-and-spoke gt large investment needs, LT
    door-to-door gt less...
  • LT as one-to-one, LTL as one-to-many solutions
    (more need for coordination in LTL)
  • LTL should be one, LT can be dispersed (little
    benefits from internalisation)
  • Question how is profitability affected by driver
    missalignment?
  • Answer those, who misalign have lower profits
    ceteris paribus

36
Bringing the market inside the firm
  • Baker, Gibbons and Murphy (AER)
  • Theoretical model
  • Upstream party, downstream party and assets
  • Transaction contains contractible
    (court-enforceable) and noncontractible
    (bargaining, hold-up, etc.) components
  • Compare spot employment and spot outsourcing
  • Conclusions
  • Informal spot markets cannot be replicated within
    firm
  • Relational employment can improve both spot
    alternatives via providing adequate incentive
    structure (separating equilibrium)
  • Why important?
  • Selective intervention can provide a viable
    alternative to infinitely huge firms
  • Sometimes selective intervention impossible
  • Relational contracts are important inside firms
    because they improve on market outcomes (and not
    because they replicate spot-market payoffs)
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