INSTITUTIONS AND INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT.doc
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1、THE INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXT OF MULTINATIONAL ACTIVITYMauro F. GuillnThe Wharton School and Department of SociologyUniversity of PennsylvaniaandSandra L. SurezDepartment of Political Science, Temple UniversityPrepared for the Second Edition ofOrganization Theory and the Multinational CorporationEdited
2、by Sumantra Ghoshal and Eleanor WestneyNew York: St. Martins Press.The comparative theory of institutions is based on the premise that the underlying assumptions guiding economic behavior vary across time and space. As an economic actor, the multinational enterprise (MNE) is exposed to a variety of
3、institutional contexts (Westney 1993), which creates the need for it to diagnose their peculiarities, and decide whether to adapt its strategy and organizational structure accordingly. This chapter reviews the main ways in which scholars have looked at cross-national variations that are relevant to
4、the study of foreign direct investment (FDI) and the MNE. Five main cross-national approaches are identified: cross-cultural, comparative authority and business systems, political economy of foreign investment, comparative corporate legal traditions, and political hazards. The theoretical, methodolo
5、gical, and empirical accomplishments of each approach are systematically compared. INSTITUTIONS AND INSTITUTIONAL CONTEXTUnlike ten or twenty years ago, most social scientists agree today that institutions and institutional context matter when it comes to understanding economic, political, or social
6、 behavior by individual actors and organizations. Organizationsincluding MNEsare constrained and supported by institutional forces (Scott 1995:55). MNEs are born into a specific institutional context in their home country whose features MNEs carry with them when expanding abroad (Doremus et al. 1998
7、). And the institutional context in the host country is relevant to understand the level of FDI, the choice of entry mode, and the way in which the MNE is organized and managed. Although institutions are relevant to the study of multinational activity, however, no attempt has been made to review the
8、 various ways in which scholars have defined the institutional context.The study of institutions has a long history in the social sciences, going back to at least the second half of the 19th century (Scott 1995). Institutions are sense-making frames that (1) constitute actors as such, and (2) guide
9、their action in appropriate and effective ways towards legitimate and meaningful ends. Institutions refract motives and behavior, goals and means, into meaningful action. Institutions come under many different guises. Laws and other “rules of the game” are highly formalized institutions, imposed by
10、legitimate actors (the state) or powerful organizations. Institutions, however, also include taken-for-granted assumptions, developed through habit and rooted in collective understandings. Formal and informal institutions have the same effect: providing for stability and meaning to economic, politic
11、al, and social life (Scott 1995:33). Whether formally sanctioned or not, institutions are historically developed and relatively resilient to change. There are three key aspects of institutions that deserve careful attention. First, it is important to underline that institutions are simultaneously co
12、nstraining and enabling. They constitute actors, guide action, and pose limits on behavior. Choice is informed as well as constrained by the way knowledge is institutionally constructed (Scott 1995:51). The sociological concept of institutions as constituting actors as well as shaping action stands
13、in contrast with the economic view of institutions. Economists tend to see institutions as constraints on behavior, as “the rules of the game in a society the constraints that shape human interaction” (North 1990:3; emphasis added). Given human tendencies to cheat one another, institutions become me
14、chanisms to overcome anomalies, e.g., market failure due to the costliness of measurement and enforcement (North 1990, 1997; Williamson 1985). Institutions, however, are more than just constraints on behavior. They constitute and enable actors to engage in socially meaningful action by making them l
15、egitimate and knowledgeable in a given situation. Thus, local law or culture may view foreign firms as intruders whose activities need to be curtailed, or they may see them as contributors to local prosperity. As a result, MNE behavior will differ depending on the nature of the institutions in the h
16、ost country.Second, institutions shape not only the means of social action but also the ends, that is, preferences are endogenous to the institutional understanding of the world (Scott 1995:51). Institutions affect to what extent organizationsincluding MNEspursue profitability, growth, technological
17、 advancement or employee well being as their primary goals. It is important to note that an MNE may be born into a country in which profitability is the overriding goal of firms, and expand into countries in which technological development and employee welfare are also relevant considerations. Third
18、, institutions are embedded in carriers or repositories, which facilitate their continuity over time. Scott (1995:52-55) distinguishes among three main institutional carriers, namely, cultures, social structures, and routines. Cultures are symbolic representations of the world, of problematic social
19、 reality (Geertz 1973:220), and they provide not only values and beliefs, but also strategies of action (Swidler 1986). Social structures consist of constellations of roles and positions in which actors operate. They create channels for the articulation and deployment of institutions because actors
20、tend to behave according to the institutions recognized as such in the social structure in which they are embedded (Granovetter 2001). Routines are learned, nonreflective patterns of behavior that provide for continuity, stability, and predictability. Unlike other organizations, MNEs are by definiti
21、on exposed to two or more cultures, social structures, or sets of routines, one in the home country, and one or more in the host countries in which they operate. Thus, MNEs are exposed to possibly different and potentially conflicting institutional demands (Westney 1993). In organizational terms, th
22、e demands of the home-country environment stem from the “imprinting effect” (Stinchcombe 1965), while the institutional conditions in the host country may be conceptualized according to the resource-dependence, neoinstitutional, or transaction-cost perspectives (see Scott 1998; Perrow 1986).When it
23、comes to the study of FDI and the MNE, institutional contexts tend to be defined at the country level of analysis. Rare is the country, however, that contains only one relevant institution. Thus, institutional contexts are more likely systems of somewhat mutually consistent and coherent institutions
24、 that have co-evolved over a relatively long period of time. The different approaches that scholars have used to characterize cross-national institutional contexts adopt one of two strategies to accommodate this complexity. Some of them make simplifying assumptions and focus on a relatively narrow t
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