Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T07:09:34.057Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Internal resources, local externalities and export performance: An application in the Iberian ham cluster

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2014

Isabel Díez-Vial*
Affiliation:
Business Management Department, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Madrid, Spain
Marta Fernández-Olmos
Affiliation:
Business Management Department, Universidad de Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain
*
Corresponding author: diezvial@ccee.ucm.es

Abstract

This research aims to complement resource-based view with a cluster approach in identifying which elements, both internal to the firm and locally available, improve firms’ export performance. While in the resource-based view exporting firms are contingent upon the development of intangible resources, from a cluster approach exporters exploit local externalities, mainly related to local information, knowledge and resource spillovers. We present empirical evidence from the Iberian ham cluster in Spain, which confirms the relevance of intangibles such as R&D and marketing promotion, but also of cluster linkages with local institutions – technological centres, universities and use of Designation of Origins – in improving export performance. Contrary to expectations, employee education, organizational experience, and information and knowledge-based spillovers from proximate exporters have no significant effect. These findings suggest that an augmented framework may improve the predictive elements of export performance in clusters.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press and Australian and New Zealand Academy of Management 2013 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Aitken, B., Hanson, G., Harrison, A. (1997). Spillovers, foreign investment, and export behavior. Journal of International Economics, 43, 103132.Google Scholar
Almeida, P., Kogut, B. (1999). Localization of knowledge and the mobility of engineers in regional networks. Management Sciences, 45, 905917.Google Scholar
Alvarez, R. (2004). Sources of export success in small- and medium-sized enterprises: The impact of public programs. International Business Review, 13, 383400.Google Scholar
Ameur, M., Gil, J. M. (2003). Estrategias empresariales y propensión exportadora de la industria agroalimentaria catalana y española. Economía agraria y recursos naturales, 3(6), 101127.Google Scholar
Amin, A., Thrift, N. (1994). Globalization, institutions and regional development in Europe. Oxford: University Press.Google Scholar
Andersen, O., Kheam, L. S. (1998). Resource-based theory and international growth strategies: An explanatory study. International Business Review, 7, 163184.Google Scholar
Arikan, A. T. (2009). Interfirm knowledge exchanges and the knowledge creation capability of clusters. Academy of Management Review, 39(4), 658676.Google Scholar
Barnett, M. L., Jermier, J. M., Lafferty, B. A. (2006). Corporate reputation: The definitional landscape. Corporate Reputation Review, 9, 2638.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barney, J. (1991). Firm resources and sustained competitive advantage. Journal of Management, 17, 99120.Google Scholar
Barrios, S., Holger Görg, H., Strobl, E. (2003). Explaining firms’ export behaviour: R&D, spillovers and the destination market. Oxford Bulletin of Economics and Statistics, 65, 475496.Google Scholar
Baum, J. A., Oliver, C. (1992). Institutional embeddedness and the dynamics of organizational populations. American Sociological Review, 57, 540559.Google Scholar
Beaudry, C., Breschi, S. (2003). Are firms in clusters really more innovative? Economics of Innovation and New Technology, 13, 325342.Google Scholar
Becattini, G. (1990). The Marshallian industrial district as a socio-economic notion. In F. Pyke, G. Becattini & W. Sengenberger (Eds.), Industrial Districts and Local Economic Regeneration (pp. 3751). Geneva: International Institute for Labor Studies.Google Scholar
Becchetti, L., Panizza, A., Oropallo, F. (2007). Role of industrial district externalities in export and value-added performance: Evidence from the population of Italian firms. Regional Studies, 41, 601621.Google Scholar
Belso-Martínez, J. A. (2006). Do industrial districts influence export performance and export intensity? Evidence for Spanish SMEs’ internationalization process. European Planning Studies, 14, 791810.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benjamin, B. A., Podolny, J. (1999). Status, quality and social order in the California wine industry. Administrative Science Quarterly, 44, 563589.Google Scholar
Bernard, A. B., Jensen, B. (2004). Why some firms export. The Review of Economics and Statistics, 86, 561569.Google Scholar
Bertolini, P., Govannetti, E. (2006). Industrial districts and internationalization: The case of the agri-food industry in Modena, Italy. Entrepreneurship and Regional Development, 18, 279304.Google Scholar
Bouquet, C., Hébert, L., Delios, A. (2004). Foreign expansion in service industries: Separability and human capital intensity. Journal of Business Research, 57, 3546.Google Scholar
Brunello, G., Gambarotto, F. (2004). Agglomeration effects on employer provided training: Evidence from the UK. Cesifo Working Paper, 1150, Labor Markets.Google Scholar
Canina, L., Enz, C., Harrison, J. (2005). Agglomeration effects and strategic orientations: Evidence from the US: Lodging industry. Academy of Management Journal, 48(4), 565581.Google Scholar
Cavusgil, S. T., Naor, J. (1987). Firm and management characteristics as discriminators of export marketing activity. Journal of Business Research, 15, 221235.Google Scholar
Chatterjee, S., Wernerfelt, B. (1991). The link between resources and type of diversification: Theory and evidence. Strategic Management Journal, 12, 3348.Google Scholar
Chen, H., Hsu, C. (2010). Internationalization, resource allocation and firm performance. Industrial Marketing Management, 39, 11031110.Google Scholar
Chevassus-Lozza, E., Galliano, D. (2003). Local spillovers, firm organization and export behaviour: Evidence from the French food industry. Regional Studies, 37, 147158.Google Scholar
Chiao, Y., Yang, K., Yu, C. M. (2006). Performance, internationalization, and firm-specific advantages of SMEs in a newly-industrialized economy. Small Business Economics, 26, 475492.Google Scholar
Chung, W., Kalnins, A. (2001). Agglomeration effects and performance: A test of the Texas lodging industry. Strategic Management Journal, 22, 969988.Google Scholar
Clerides, S., Lach, S., Tybout, J. (1998). Is learning by exporting important? Micro-dynamic evidence from Colombia, Mexico and Morocco. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 113, 903947.Google Scholar
Contractor, F. J., Mudambi, S. M. (2008). The influence of human capital investment on the exports of services and goods: An analysis of the top 25 services outsourcing countries. Management International Review, 48, 433446.Google Scholar
Costa-Campi, M. T., Viladecans-Marsal, E. (1999). The district effect and the competitiveness of manufacturing companies in local productive systems. Urban Studies, 36, 20852098.Google Scholar
DeCarolis, D. M., Deeds, D. (1999). The impact of stocks and flows of organizational knowledge on firm performance: An empirical investigation of the biotechnology industry. Strategic Management Journal, 20, 953968.Google Scholar
Dei Ottati, G. (1991). The economic bases of diffuse industrialization. International Studies of Management and Organization, 21, 5374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delios, A., Henisz, W. J. (2003). Political hazards, experience, and sequential entry strategies: The international expansion of Japanese firms, 1980–1998. Strategic Management Journal, 24, 11531164.Google Scholar
deMartino, R., McHardy Reid, D., Zygliodopoulos, S. C. (2006). Balancing localization and globalization: Exploring the impact of firm internationalization on a regional cluster. Entrepreneurship and Regional Development, 18, 124.Google Scholar
Dichtl, E., Koeglmayr, H., Mueller, S. (1990). International orientation as a precondition for export success. Journal of International Business Studies, 21, 2340.Google Scholar
Dowling, P. J., Liesch, P. W., Flint, J. A., As-Saber, S. N., Chan, K., Innes, P. (2000). Strategies in exporting firms; a study of Australian small to medium enterprises in exporting to Asia. Journal of Management and Organization, 6, 119.Google Scholar
Eriksson, K., Johanson, J., Majkgard, A., Sharma, D. D. (1997). Experiential knowledge and cost in the internationalization process. Journal of international Business Studies, 28(2), 337360.Google Scholar
Erramilli, M. K., Agarwal, S., Kim, S. S. (1997). Are firm-specific advantages location-specific too? Journal of International Business Studies, 28, 735757.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Erramilli, M. K., Rao, C. P. (1993). Service firms international entry-mode choice: A modified transaction-cost analysis approach. Journal of Marketing, 57, 1938.Google Scholar
Expósito-Langa, M., Molina-Morales, F. X. (2010). How relational dimensions affect knowledge redundancy in industrial clusters. European Planning Studies, 18(12), 19751992.Google Scholar
Fernández Olmos, M. (2011). The determinants of internationalization: Evidence from the wine industry. Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy Advance, 33(3), 384401.Google Scholar
Folta, T. B., Cooper, A. C., Baik, Y. (2006). Geographic cluster size and firm performance. Journal of Business Venturing, 21, 217242.Google Scholar
Fombrum, C., Shanley, M. (1990). What's in a name? Reputation building and corporate strategy. Academy of Management Journal, 33, 233258.Google Scholar
Garnier, G. (1982). Comparative export behavior of small firms in printing and electronic industries. In M. R. Czinkota & G. Tesar (Eds.), Export management: An international context (pp. 113131). New York, NY: Praeger.Google Scholar
Giuliani, E. (2005). Cluster absorptive capacity: Why do some clusters forge ahead and others lag behind? European Urban and Regional Studies, 12(3), 269288.Google Scholar
Gomez-Mejia, L. R. (1988). The role of human resources strategy in export performance: A longitudinal study. Strategic Management Journal, 9, 493505.Google Scholar
Grant, R. M. (1991). The resource-based theory of competitive advantage: Implications for strategy formulation. California Management Review, 33, 114135.Google Scholar
Grant, R. M. (1996). Toward a knowledge-based theory of the firm. Strategic Management Journal, 17, 109122.Google Scholar
Grant, R. M., Jammine, A. P., Thomas, H. (1988). Diversity, diversification and profitability among British manufacturing companies, 1972–1984. Academy Management Journal, 31, 771801.Google Scholar
Greenaway, D., Kneller, R. (2008). Exporting, productivity and agglomeration. European Economic Review, 52, 919939.Google Scholar
Gruber, W. H., Mehta, D., Vernon, R. (1967). The R&D factor in international trade and investment of US industries. Journal of Political Economy, 75, 2037.Google Scholar
Hambrick, D., Mason, P. (1984). Upper echelons: The organization as a reflection of its top managers. Academy of Management Review, 9, 193206.Google Scholar
Hessels, J., Terjessen, S. (2010). Resource dependency and institutional theory perspectives on direct and indirect export choices. Small Business Economics, 34, 203220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Keeble, D., Lawson, C., Lawton, S. H., Wilkinson, F. (1998). Internationalisation processes, networking and local embeddedness in technology-intensive small firms. Small Business Economics, 11, 327342.Google Scholar
Koening, P. (2009). Agglomeration and the export decisions of French firms. Journal of Urban Economics, 66, 186195.Google Scholar
Kotabe, M., Srinivasan, S. S., Aulakh, P. S. (2002). Multinationality and firm performance: The moderating role of R&D and marketing capabilities. Journal of International Business Studies, 33, 7997.Google Scholar
Krugman, P. (1991). Geography and trade. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Kukalis, S. (2010). Agglomeration economies and firm performance. The case of industry clusters. Journal of Management, 36, 453481.Google Scholar
Lambooy, J. G. (2010). Knowledge transfers, spillovers and actors: The role of context and social capital. European Planning Studies, 18(6), 873891.Google Scholar
Lamprinopoulou, C., Tregear, A. (2006). Agrifood SMEs in Greece: The role of collective action. British Food Journal, 108, 663676.Google Scholar
Lee, J., Habte-Giorgis, B. (2004). Empirical approach to the sequential relationships between firm strategy, export activity, and performance in US manufacturing firms. International Business Review, 13, 101129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
López Rodriguez, J., García Rodriguez, R. (2005). Technology and export behaviour: A resource-based approach. International Business Review, 14, 539557.Google Scholar
Lotia, N. (2004). Power dynamics and learning in collaborations. Journal of Management and Organization, 10(2), 5668.Google Scholar
Lovely, M., Rosenthal, S. S., Sharma, S. (2005). Information, agglomeration, and the headquarters of US exporters. Regional Science and Urban Economics, 35, 167191.Google Scholar
Majocchi, A., Bacchiocchi, E., Mayrhofer, U. (2005). Firm size, business experience and export intensity in SMEs: A longitudinal approach to complex relationships. International Business Review, 14, 719738.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malmberg, A., Malmberg, B., Lundequist, P. (2000). Agglomeration and firm performance: Economies of scale, localization and urbanization among Swedish export firms. Environment and Planning A, 32, 305321.Google Scholar
Marshall, A. (1890/1920). Principles of economics. London: MacMillan.Google Scholar
Maskell, P. (2001). Towards a knowledge-based theory of the geographical cluster. Industrial and Corporate Change, 10, 921943.Google Scholar
May, W., Mason, C., Pinch, S. (2001). Explaining industrial agglomeration: The case of the British high-fidelity industry. Geoforum, 32, 363376.Google Scholar
McEvily, B., Zaheer, A. (1999). Bridging ties: A source of firm heterogeneity in competitive capabilities. Strategic Management Journal, 20, 11331156.Google Scholar
Menard, C. (1996). On clusters, hybrids and other strange forms: The case of the French poultry industry. Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics, 152, 154183.Google Scholar
Molina-Morales, F. X., Martínez-Fernadez, M. T. (2004). How much difference is there between industrial district firms? A net value creation approach. Research Policy, 33, 473486.Google Scholar
Molina-Morales, F. X., Martínez-Fernadez, M. T. (2010). Social networks: Effects of social capital on firm innovation. Journal of Small Business Management, 48, 258279.Google Scholar
Morgan, K. (1997). The learning region: Institutions, innovation and regional renewal. Regional Studies, 31, 491503.Google Scholar
Nassimbeni, G. (2001). Technology, innovation capacity, and the export attitude of small manufacturing firms: A logit/tobit model. Research Policy, 30, 245262.Google Scholar
North, D. (1955). Location theory and regional economic growth. Journal of Political Economy, 63, 243258.Google Scholar
Peng, W. (2001). The resource-based view and international business. Journal of Management, 27, 803829.Google Scholar
Peteraf, M. A. (1993). The cornerstones of competitive advantage: A resource-based view. Strategic Management Journal, 14, 179191.Google Scholar
Pla-Barber, J., Alegre, J. (2007). Analyzing the link between export intensity, innovation and firm size in a science-based industry. International Business Review, 16, 275293.Google Scholar
Plá-Barber, J., Puig, F. (2009). Is the influence of the industrial district on international activities being eroded by globalization? Evidence from a traditional manufacturing industry. International Business Review, 18, 435445.Google Scholar
Porter, M. (1998). Clusters and the new economics of competition. Harvard Business Review, 76, 7790.Google Scholar
Requier-Desjardins, D., Boucher, F., Cerdan, C. (2003). Globalization, competitive advantage and the evolution of production systems: Rural food processing and localized agri-food systems in Latin-American countries. Entrepreneurship and Regional Development, 15, 4967.Google Scholar
Rocha, H., Sternberg, R. (2005). Entrepreneurship: The role of clusters theoretical perspectives and empirical evidence from Germany. Small Business Economics, 23, 267292.Google Scholar
Schwens, C., Kabst, R. (2009). How early opposed to late internationalizers learn: Experience of others and paradigms of interpretation. International Business Review, 18, 509522.Google Scholar
Shaver, J. M., Flyer, F. (2000). Agglomeration economies, firm heterogeneity and foreign direct investment in the United States. Strategic Management Journal, 21, 11751193.Google Scholar
Shaver, J. M., Mitchell, W., Yeung, B. (1997). The effect of own-firm and other-firm experience on foreign direct investment survival in the United States, 1987–92. Strategic Management Journal, 18, 811824.Google Scholar
Simpson, C. L., Kujawa, D. (1974). The export decision process: An empirical enquiry. Journal of International Business Studies, 1, 107117.Google Scholar
Singh, D. A. (2009). Export performance of emerging markets firms. International Business Review, 18, 321330.Google Scholar
Skaggs, B. C., Youndt, M. (2004). Strategic positioning, human capital, and performance in service organizations: A customer interaction approach. Strategic Management Journal, 25, 8599.Google Scholar
Storper, M. (1995). The resurgence of regional economies, ten years later: The region as a nexus of untraded interdependencies. European Urban and Regional Studies, 2, 191221.Google Scholar
Tallman, S., Jenkins, M., Henry, N., Pinch, S. (2004). Knowledge, clusters, and competitive advantage. Academy of Management Review, 29(2), 258271.Google Scholar
Teece, D., Pisano, G., Shuen, A. (1997). Dynamic capabilities and strategic management. Strategic Management Journal, 18, 509533.Google Scholar
Tookey, D. A. (1964). Factors associated with success in exporting. Journal of Management Studies, 1, 4864.Google Scholar
Tseng, C., Tansuhaj, P., Hallagan, W., McCullough, J. (2007). Effects of firm resources on growth in multinationality. Journal of International Business Studies, 38, 961974.Google Scholar
Vermeulen, P. (2004). Factor content, size, and export propensity at the firm level. Economic letters, 82, 249252.Google Scholar
Wagner, J. (1995). Exports, firm size, and firm dynamics. Small Business Economics, 7(1), 2939.Google Scholar
Wang, C., Hsu, L., Fang, S. (2008). The determinants of internationalization: Evidence from the Taiwan high technology industry. Technological Forecasting & Social Change, 75, 13881395.Google Scholar
Welch, D. E., Welch, L. S., Young, L. G., Wilkinson, I. F. (1997). The importance of networks in export promotion: Policy issues. Journal of International Marketing, 6, 6682.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, T., Brouthers, L. E. (2006). Trade promotion and SME export performance. International Business Review, 15, 233252.Google Scholar