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The Importance of Social Capital to the Management of Multinational Enterprises: Relational Networks Among Asian and Western Firms
Authors:Michael A. Hitt  Ho-uk Lee  Emre Yucel
Affiliation:(1) Department of Management, College of Business, Arizona State University, P.O. Box 874006, Tempe, AZ 85287-4006, USA;(2) Department of Management, College of Business, University of Connecticut, 2100 Hillside Road, Unit 1041, Storrs, CT 06269-1041, USA
Abstract:
Social capital is an important concept for multinational firms. Firms operating in global markets rarely have adequate resources to compete effectively in global markets; they access the needed resources through formal and informal relationships with other firms. The cultures in Asian countries have emphasized relationships much more strongly than Western firms. Thus, relational capital, based on guanxi (China), kankei (Japan) and inmak (Korea), provides the framework for business dealings in many Asian countries. As a result, the social capital of many Asian firms gives them a potential competitive advantage in global markets. Western firms must develop social capital and learn to manage relational networks to gain and sustain a competitive advantage in global markets. Western firms can learn how to develop and manage social capital from Asian firms. Alternatively, social capital has some disadvantages. Firms are limited by their networks and thus experience opportunity costs and path dependence. Additionally, while Asian firms often have strong network ties in their domestic markets, they have to develop many more ties globally to operate effectively in global markets. As a result, the development and management of social capital has become of critical importance for competitive advantage in global markets.
Keywords:social capital  strategic alliances  guanxi  kankei  inmak  keiretsu  trust
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