Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6482328 Journal of Engineering and Technology Management 2017 25 Pages PDF
Abstract
Drawing on the literature on joint venture learning, we propose that a parent company's investment in joint ventures (JVs) is central to understanding knowledge learning and the firm's consequent performance. This study suggests that there is an inverse U-shaped relationship between the number of JV investments and knowledge creation. Moreover, a parent company's absorbed slack, unabsorbed slack and experience with JVs suppress the negative effects of higher JV investments on knowledge creation. Poisson, negative binomial and generalized two-stage least squares regressions are used to test the hypotheses in a panel data of 2734 firm-year cases. The findings support our predictions.
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