What are the extant theories and reasoning behind bribery for firms?
What are common causes of bribery?
How may a non-bribing firm struggle to compete with bribing firms in a regulated market where government officials are prone to seeking personal benefits by taking bribes? (2)
From a bribing firms perspective, bribery is a ‘quicker, and perhaps more effective, strategic instrument’ for going through the regulatory process.
1. Non-bribing firms may be put at a disadvantage as they may face regulatory challenges such as:
- Higher rejection rates when requesting for public resources
- Facing stricter regulations
- Longer decision times
- Higher costs
3. These firms also miss out on the benefits of economies of scale, reducing their ability to compete effectively in foreign markets.
What is Hypothesis 1a and Hypothesis 1b for the paper “Does Bribery in the Home Country Promote or Dampen Firm Exports?”
What were the results for H1a and H1b in the paper “Does Bribery in the Home Country Promote or Dampen Firm Exports?”
H1a: Not supported, the coefficient of bribery in the home country suggests that a 1 percent increase in bribery in the home country lowers export intensity by 1.43 percent.
H1b: Supported, it is found that as bribery in the home country increases, firm exports decrease.
Explain Nonmarket Strategy (NMS)
This is a firms action to improve its competitive position and performance by actively managing the institutional or societal contexts of business competition in which it operates.
What are the 2 interrelated components of Nonmarket Strategy?
Corporate Political Activity (CPA) & Strategic Corporate Social Responsibility (SCSR).
What are weak institutional contexts? (3)
Institutions which do not adequately support market transactions.
How can firms deal with weak institutional contexts? (3)
Define transaction costs
Expenses related to capturing and protecting value
Define institutional costs
Costs associated with the specific institutional environment a firm operates in.
Define and Explain the variables associated with Strategic Intent and Governance for the nonmarket strategy typology (7)
Define Internalization Strategies and state its placement in the nonmarket typology:
Internalization is where firms place the transaction within firm boundaries to create an appropriate value. (Most likely Vertical Integration)
Strategic Intent: Adaptive
Governance: Independent
Define Partnership Strategies and state its placement in the nonmarket typology:
A partnership is creating a hybrid governance form that lowers the risk of opportunism and allows two parties to collaborate to mutual benefit.
Strategic Intent: Adaptive
Governance: Collaborative
Define Proactive Strategies and state its placement in the nonmarket typology:
Firms seeking to augment the institutional environment volunteer to share value with others unilaterally in the expectation of being rewarded for doing so.
Strategic Intent: Additive
Governance: Independent
Define Collective Strategies and state its placement in the nonmarket typology:
Firms seeking to augment the institutional environment by developing new rules and norms in collaboration with others to jointly create and manage common pool resources.
Strategic Intent: Additive
Governance: Collective
Define Coalition Strategies and state its placement in the nonmarket typology:
Firms seeking to transform the institutional environment to alter governing institutions in ways that benefit them all.
Strategic Intent: Transformational
Governance: Collective
Define Influence Strategies and state its placement in the nonmarket typology:
Firms seeking to transform the institutional environment by influencing governing institutions to their exclusive advantage.
Strategic Intent: Transformational
Governance: Independent
Opportunism
When someone takes advantage of a situation for their own benefit which may have negative implications for the opposing party.
What factors influence the adaptive approach a firm may select?
What institutional scenarios best suit additive approaches? (4)
What determines a transformative approaches success? (1)
The influence of the political context and on the capabilities and experience of the firm itself.
Define an incomplete institution
Institutions where regulations are either absent or too unpredictable or weakly enforced for transacting parties to rely on them.
In Incomplete Institutions: Internalization or Partnership
Internalization: Within incomplete institutions, there are institutional costs which are driven by the risk of opportunistic behavior by transaction partners.