Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10494532 | Long Range Planning | 2005 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
We study a sample of 91 parent-subsidiary pairs in the Japanese service sector. Our analysis of performance in the decade following the subsidiary's listing indicates that the subsidiaries tend to exhibit stronger short-to-medium term growth than their parents. Profitability growth performance after 10 years is diversification-related; subsidiaries operating in the parent's industry tend to underperform the parent, while those operating in a different industry tend to outperform their parents. We suggest a unique organisational approach to ownership decisions and governance modes for corporate subsidaries-creating offspring with improved survival capabilities.
Related Topics
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Authors
Elizabeth L. Rose, Kiyohiko Ito,