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Publié par
Publié le
01 janvier 2007
Nombre de lectures
26
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
14 Mo
Publié par
Publié le
01 janvier 2007
Nombre de lectures
26
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
14 Mo
The Corporate Governance of Subsidiaries in Multinational
Corporations
-
Theoretical Analysis and Empirical Evidence from Europe
vorgelegt von
Diplom-Kaufmann
Jochen Alexander Brellochs
aus Stuttgart
von der Fakultät VII – Wirtschaft und Management
der Technischen Universität Berlin
zu Erlangung des akademischen Grades
Doktor der Wirtschaftswissenschaften
Dr.rer.oec.
genehmigte Dissertation
Promotionsausschuss:
Vorsitzender: Prof. Dr. Axel Hunscha
Berichter: Prof. Dr. Ulrich Steger
Berichter: Prof. Dr. Axel von Werder
Tag der wissenschaftlichen Aussprache: 17.12.2007
Berlin 2007
D 83 iiAcknowledgements
First and foremost, I want to thank my supervisor Prof. Ulrich Steger for his support,
encouragement and trust throughout my entire time as Ph.D. student. It has been a
tremendously enriching experience both professionally and personally, and I could not
have wished for a better mentor. I would also like to thank Prof. Axel von Werder for co-
supervising this thesis.
This work would not have been possible without the environment at IMD in Lausanne,
where the largest part of the research and writing took place. I am truly thankful for the
opportunity to work in such an environment and too many people have contributed to this
positive experience for me to mention here. Of particular impact, however, were Oliver
Salzmann, Wolfgang Amann, George Rädler, Alyson Woolfrey, Karsten Jonsen and
Christoph Nedopil.
I thank my brother, Michael, for the inspiration his development path has given me. My
thoughts are also with my late grandmother, Lisa. I am grateful for the influence she had
on my life.
My final thoughts go to my parents, Ursula and Werner. Both of you have contributed in
manifold ways to me reaching this point, each of you in your own way. I will always be
grateful for all you have given me, and it is to you that I dedicate this thesis.
Stuttgart, December 2007 Jochen A. Brellochs
iiiTable of Contents
Table ofcontes I
Index of abbreviations III
Index of tables IV
Index of figures VI
1. INTRODUCTION 1
1.1 THE SUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE PROBLEM 1
1.2 OBJECTIVE AND INTENDED CONTRIBUTIONS 8
1.3 COURSE OF THE INVESTIGATION 12
2. KEY CONCEPTS AND THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS 16
2.1 CORPORATE GOVERNANCE EVOLUTION AND MODERN UNDERSTANDING
2.2 SUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE IN MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS 24
2.2.1 CORPORATE ORGANIZING AND CORPORATE GOVERNANCE
2.2.2 SUBSIDIARY CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 30
2.3 MECHANISMS OF CLASSICAL CORPORATE GOVERNANCE 34
2.3.1 APPLICATION TO SUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE
2.3.2 INTERNAL GOVERNANCE MECHANISMS
2.3.3 EXTERNAL GMS 41
2.4 SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION 48
3. RESEARCH FIELD AND FURTHER RESEARCH STEPS 55
4. THEORETICAL ANALYSIS AND FRAMEWORK 56
4.1 THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS ON SUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE
4.2 AGENCY THEORETICAL ANALYSIS OF SUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE 62
4.2.1 EMERGENCE AND NATURE OF AGENCY THEORY 62
4.2.2 ANALYSIS AND TESTING OF AGENCY THEORY ASSUMPTIONS 64
4.2.3 AGENCY PROBLEMS AND AGENCY COST OF SUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE 71
4.2.4 AGENCY MECHANISMS FOR SUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE 76
I4.2.5 EVALUATION AND LIMITATIONS OF AGENCY THEORY FOR SUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE 80
4.3 COMBINATION WITH CONTINGENCY THEORY 86
4.4 DEDUCTION OF HYPOTHESIZED RELATIONSHIPS 90
4.4.1 INTRODUCTION 90
4.4.2 GOVERNANCE MECHANISM-BASED PROPOSITIONS 94
4.4.3 CONTINGENCIES OF SUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE 109
5. METHODOLOGY OF THE INVESTIGATION 119
5.1 FRAMEWORK 119
5.2 SAMPLING 122
5.3 ORGANIZATION OF THE RESEARCH PROJECT 129
5.4 OPERATIONALIZATION 132
5.5 METHODS OF DATA ANALYSIS AND EVALUATION 143
5.6 EVALUATION OF RESEARCH METHODOLOGY 154
6. EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE 160
6.1 RESPONDENTS SAMPLE ANALYSE AND DESCRIPTION
6.2 DESCRIPTIVE STATISTICS ON RESPONDING MNCS 166
6.3 DSSUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE 171
6.4 SUBSIDIARY GOVERNANCE MECHANISMS AND CONTINGENCIES 181
6.4.1 GOVERNANCE MECHANISM-BASED ANALYSIS 181
6.4.2 CONTINGENCY-BASED ANALYSIS 255
7. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION 283
7.1 SYNOPSIS OF THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL FINDINGS
7.2 CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE LITERATURE 286
7.3 LIMITATIONS AND RESEARCH SUGGESTIONS 293
7.4 CONCLUSION 300
Apendices VI
Biblography VI
Further figures and tables XXXIII
IIIndex of abbreviations
CEO Chief Executive Officer
df degrees of freedom
EU European Union
FDI Foreign direct investment
FN Footnote
GB Great Britain
LLP Limited Liability Partnership
MNC Multinational Corporation
MNCs al Corporations
MNE Multinational Enterprise
MIS Management Information System
p. page
pp. pages
PLC Public Limited Company
P Proposition number x x
R&D research and development (department)
2R R-squared
SE Societas Europaea (European public company)
SPSS Statistical Package for the Social Sciences
UK United Kingdom
US States
USA United States of America
USD United States Dollars
VAT Value added tax
IIIIndex of tables
Table 1: Organization of the research project
Table 2: Organizational location of survey respondents
Table 3: Hierarchical distance of subsidiary respondents to MNC headquarters
Table 4: Responding MNCs group size
Table 5: Emergence of issues of information asymmetry
Table 6: Emergence of issues of information asymmetry: sub-sample comparison
Table 7: Emergence of conflicts of interest
Table 8: Emergence of conflicts of interest: sub-sample comparison
Table 9: Emergence of subsidiary governance problems
Table 10: Emergence of subsidiary governance problems: sub-sample comparison
1Table 11: Descriptive statistics: group-wide corporate governance body (P ) a
1Table 12: Regression analyses: group-wide corporate governanc ) b
2Table 13: Descriptive statistics: expatriates in subsidiary management (P ) a
2Table 14: Regression analyses: expatriates in subsidiary management (P ) b
3Table 15: mutual subsidiary governance (P ) a
3Table 16: Regression analyses: mutual subsidiary gov ) b
Table 17: Descriptive statistics: group-wide corporate governance
4 information system (P ) a
Table 18: Regression analyses: group-wide corporate governance
4(P ) b
Table 19: Descriptive statistics: performance-based subsidiary manager
5 compensation (P ) a
Table 20: Regression analyses: performance-based subsidiary manager
5(P ) b
6Table 21: Descriptive statistics: non-financial subsidiary manager incentives (P ) a
Table 22: Regression analyses: non-financial subsidiary manager incentives
6 (P) b
7Table 23: Descriptive statistics: group-wide corporate culture (P ) a
7Table 24: Regression analyses: group-wide corporate culture (P ) b
8Table 25: Descriptive statistics: subsidiary manager executive development (P ) a
Table 26: Regression analyses: subsidiary manager executive development
8 (P) b
9Table 27: Descriptive statistics: codes of corporate governance/conduct (P ) a
Table 28: Regression analyses: codes of corporate governance/conduct
9(P ) b
Table 29: Descriptive statistics: individual subsidiary/subsidiary manager
10 contracts (P ) a
Table 30: Regression analyses: individual s
10(P ) b
11Table 31: Descriptive statistics: formal standards (P ) a
11Table 32: Regression analyses: formal standards (P ) b
12Table 33: Descriptive statistics: subsidiary planning/budgeting/pricing system (P ) a
Table 34: Regression analyses: subsidicing
12 system (P ) b
Table 35: List of interviews
Table 36: Surveying time frame and responses
Table 37: Measurement scales and variables
Table 38: Normality tests
Table 39: Correlation matrix
Table 40: Homoscedasticity tests
IVTable 41: Durbin–Watson and variance inflation factor (VIF) test
Table 42: Tinsley¬–Weiss T index
Table 43: Kolmogorov–Smirnov and Mann–Whitney U test response bias
analysis
Table 44: Kolmogorov–Smirnov, Mann¬–Whitney U and independent samples t-
test for response bias
Table 45: Runs test for cut-off point
Table 46: Responses per MNC headquarters’ country
Table 47: MNC headquarters’ region clusters, based on Hofstede (1980, 2001)
Table 48: Subsidiary governance approach of MNCs
1Table 49: Complete enter regression model (P ) b
2Table 50: ) b
4Table 51: ) b
5Table 52: ) b
7Table 53: ) b
8Table 54: ) b
9Table 55: ) b
10Table 56: Complete enter regression model (P ) b
12Table 57: ) b
Table 58: Descriptive statistics: contingency variables
VIndex of figures
Figure 1: Structure of the investigation
Figure 2: Organizational comparison of corporate versus subsidiary governance
Figure 3: Incongruence of the legal form of the business organization
Figure 4: Comparison classical corporate governance versus subsidiary