Page 1/20 The Choice of Organizational Form: Vertical Financial Ownership Versus Other Methods of Vertical Integration Joseph Mahoney, SMJ, 1992 Presented.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 1 Financial Management.
Advertisements

Ishva Minefee September 25, 2012
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT I AND II
STRATEGIC ASSETS AND ORGANIZATIONAL RENT Amit, R., & Schoemaker, P. J. H., SMJ, 1993 Youngsoo Kim, BADM 545 Fall 2013.
© 2009 Pearson Education Canada 19/1 Chapter 19 The Theory of the Firm.
Financial Management I
Chapter 9: Economics of Strategy: Game theory
Managerial Economics and Organizational Architecture, 5e Chapter 9: Economics of Strategy: Game Theory McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill.
Strategy Research: Governance and Competence Perspectives Oliver E. Williamson, 1999, SMJ Presented by Wenting (Christy) ZHU 1.
Page 1 15th ITS World Conference September 2004 Dr. Jan Krancke T-Mobile International Who is afraid of Market Dynamics ? The Regulatory Leviathan.
Lecture 5 Contracting and Other Economic Determinants of Financial Reporting.
1 9 Corporate Strategy: Horizontal Integration, Vertical Integration, and Strategic Outsourcing.
Prepared by Arabella Volkov University of Southern Queensland.
From transaction cost to transactional value analysis: Implications for the study of inter- organizational strategies Zajac, Edward J. & Olsen, Cyrus P.
Accounting Research: Contemporary Issues
The Organization of the Firm
Making Financial Reporting Decisions Modules 3, 4 & 5 deal with theoretical frameworks related to making financial reporting decisions How do I make financial.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. 9-1 Chapter (1) An Overview Of Financial Management.
9 Corporate Strategy: Horizontal Integration, Vertical Integration, and Strategic Outsourcing.
Chapter 1 Financial Management.
Operations Management Session 25: Supply Chain Coordination.
Economic Foundations of Strategy Chapter 2: Transaction Costs Theory
Chapter 9 Vertical Integration in Distribution
1 Transaction Cost Economics of Agricultural Product Exchanges for Biopower: Theory and Evidence Ira Altman Graduate Research Assistant Community Policy.
Reconciling institutional theory with organizational theories How neoinstitutionalism resolves five paradoxes? Ms.Chanatip Dansirisanti ( 陳美清 ) MA2N0204.
Chapter 1 Financial Management. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved Describe the cycle of money, the participants in the cycle, and.
Author: Villalonga, B. and McGahan, A. Strategic Management Journal, 26 (13): Presented by Nan Zhang.
Journal of Financial Economics
ACCT3003 Issues in Accounting Theory
The Costs and Benefits of Ownership: A Theory of Vertical and Lateral Integration Oliver D. Hart, Professor of Economics at Harvard University Sanford.
Paper Discussion Market Frictions as Building Blocks of an Organizational Economics Approach to Strategic Management Authors Joseph T. Mahoney and Lihong.
The Choice of Organizational Form VERTICAL FINANCIAL OWNERSHIP VERSUS OTHER METHODS OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION Mahoney, SMJ Joshua Downs 8/31/2015.
Principles of Finance T ODAY’S S ESSION ‘Introduction to Finance’  Chapter One : An overview of managerial Finance.
MANAGERIAL ECONOMICS Mintarti Rahayu Introduction to Managerial Economics.
Resource-Based and Property Rights Perspectives on Value Creation: The Case of Oil Field Unitization Jongwook Kim and Joseph T. Mahoney Managerial and.
The Resource-Based View Within The Conversation Of Strategic Management Joseph T. Mahoney J. Rajendran Pandian A Paper Summary By Amit Darekar Strategic.
How to assess vertical mergers cast your vote! Miguel de la Mano* Member of the Chief Economist Team DG COMP, European Commission *The views expressed.
Raphael Amit & Paul Schoemaker – 1993, SMJ STRATEGIC ASSETS AND ORGANIZATIONAL RENT.
Vertical Scope of the Firm What are the appropriate vertical boundaries of the firm?
Making Financial Reporting Decisions
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Corporate Finance, 7/e Eighth Edition.
Strategic Thinking and Decision Making Dr. Fred Mugambi JKUAT.
CHAPTER 1 The Role and Environment of Managerial Finance
Objectives of the Session By the end of this session, it will be hoped to achieve the following objectives;  To understand the nature and scope of managerial.
1 The Choice of Organizational Form: Vertical Financial Ownership versus Other Methods of Vertical Integration (Joe Mahoney, SMJ 1992 ) Prepared by: Enrique,
Strategic Thinking and Decision Making Dr. Fred Mugambi JKUAT.
Strategy Research: Governance and Competence Perspectives Oliver E
MKT 450 Strategic Management Mishari Alnahedh
MKTG 450 Selected Topic in Marketing: Distribution Management Spring 2009, Dr. Stefan Wuyts Vertical integration.
The Choice of Organizational Form
Joseph T. Mahoney & J Rajendran Pandian
Slides by Minjae Lee, BADM 545 Fall 2013
Understand that corporate-level strategies include decisions regarding diversification, international expansion, and vertical integration Describe the.
The Choice Among Acquisitions, Alliances, and Divestitures
The Choice of Organizational Form: Vertical Financial Ownership versus Other Methods of Vertical Integration (Joe Mahoney, SMJ 1992) I-Chen Wang.
Technical Change, Competition and Vertical Integration
Chapter 9 Corporate-Level Strategy: Horizontal Integration, Vertical Integration, and Strategic Outsourcing.
The Costs of Organization
Economic systems Analysis Who makes the economic decisions?
Firm-Specific Human Capital, Organizational Incentives, and Agency Costs: Evidence from Retail Banking Douglas Frank and Tomasz Obloj Strategic Management.
Vertical Integration and The Scope of the Firm
Chapter 9 Corporate-Level Strategy: Horizontal Integration, Vertical Integration, and Strategic Outsourcing.
Economics of Pricing Strategies
Chapter 19 The Theory of the Firm
9 Chapter 9: Corporate Strategy: Horizontal Integration, Vertical Integration, and Strategic Outsourcing BA 469 Spring Term, 2007 Prof. Dowling.
Economics of Organization Chapter 2: Transaction Costs Theory
Operations Management
Economic Foundations of Strategy Chapter 2: Transaction Costs Theory
Testing Alternative Theories of The Firm:
The Choice of Organizational Form: Vertical Financial Ownership V. S
Presentation transcript:

Page 1/20 The Choice of Organizational Form: Vertical Financial Ownership Versus Other Methods of Vertical Integration Joseph Mahoney, SMJ, 1992 Presented by Jenna Moore, BADM 545 Fall 2013

Page 2/20 OVERVIEW  Purpose: To provide an integrative framework for predicting and prescribing organizational form of vertical control (Table 3, p. 576)  Synthesizes empirical evidence from economics and strategy  Applies insights from agency and transaction cost theory  Structure of Paper: (1)Advantages of vertical integration: purported motives (2)Isomorphic nature of vertical financial ownership and vertical contracting (3)General theory for predicting patterns of vertical financial ownership and vertical contracting in different environments: Integrating transaction costs and agency theory

Page 3/20 Advantages of Vertical Integration Strategy  Motives allegedly explaining vertical financial ownership: (1)strategic considerations—increasing barriers of entry (‘price squeezing’), foreclosing competitors, raise competitors’ costs (2)output/input price advantages—successive monopoly, bilateral monopoly, upstream monopoly (3)Uncertainties in costs/prices—minimize risks associated with supply and demand uncertainties, measurement and quality uncertainties *Problem: motives provide explanations for vertical coordination, but do not provide prescriptions on choice of governance structure

Page 4/20 Isomorphic Nature of Vertical Integration and Contracting  Vertical contracting (e.g., resale price maintenance, exclusive dealing) = alternative to vertical financial ownership  Offers illustration of isomorphism by addressing each of the 3 preceding motives using vertical contracting instead of vertical financial ownership  Main point: In the absence of transaction costs, vertical contracting and vertical financial ownership are interchangeable

Page 5/20 Two Branches of Agency Theory 1)Mathematical principal agent models  Ignores problems of bounded rationality and transaction costs (‘Coasean world’)  The firm is viewed as a “nexus of contracts”  Organizational form is irrelevant 2) Positive agency theory  Agency costs are subset of transaction costs  Costs include: monitoring and bonding expenditures, and the residual loss

Page 6/20 Advantages of Vertical Financial Ownership According to transaction costs theory, the following advantages are generated by vertical financial ownership: (1)Preemptive claims on Profit (2)Coordination and control (3)Audit and resource allocation (4)Motivation (5)Communication Conclusion: when a firm vertically integrates, changes occur that relate to governance structures, incentives, and ownership

Page 7/20 Disadvantages of Vertical Financial Ownership But should vertical financial ownership be chosen based on governance structure, ownership, and incentive advantages?  Making this decision based solely on organizational economics is limited; lacks a comparative institutional assessment When considering implementation problems, strategic management researchers have uncovered the following disadvantages: (1)Bureaucratic costs (2)Strategic costs (3)Production costs

Page 8/20 Framework For Predicting Organizational Form Recall: transaction costs approach considers asset specificity but ignores interactive effects of measurement problems Positive agency theory considers interactive effects of measurement problems but ignores asset specificity  The integration of these two perspectives allows for predictions and prescriptions to be made regarding choice of governance structure  Essentially 8 different circumstances that might face the firm (see Table 3)

Page 9/20

Page 10/20 Conclusion Integrating strategy and economics allows us to gain new and interesting theoretical insights A synthesis of the agency and transaction costs literatures allowed for the creation of an integrative framework used to predict and prescribe the optimal vertical governance structure Future research should investigate empirically whether or not the relationships within this framework do in fact predict organizational form