Español English Contacte con nosotros http://www.uc3m.es/portal/page/portal/biblioteca
DSpace e-Archivo

Archivo Abierto Institucional de la Universidad Carlos III de Madrid > Investigación > Departamentos > Departamento de Economía de la Empresa > DEE - Artículos de Revistas >

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10016/7638

Google™ Scholar. Others By: Gambardella, Alfonso - Giarratana, Marco S.
Files in This Item:
organizational_giarratana_OS_2010.pdf-- 2010-04-12 -- Available on Internet -- pubprint146,85 kBAdobe PDFformato pdf
Title: Organizational attributes and the distribution of rewards in a region: managerial firms vs. knowledge clusters
Author(s): Gambardella, Alfonso
Giarratana, Marco S. [mgiarrat]
Publisher: HighWire Press
Issued date: Mar-2010
Citation: Organization Science, 2010, 21, 2. p.573-586
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10016/7638
ISSN: 1526-5455
DOI: 10.1287/orsc.1090.0449
Abstract: This paper expands the organization theory and evidence on regional industrial agglomerations. We define regional economic activities according to the attributes of the organizations that populate a region and investigate how organizational characteristics influence macro-outcomes at a regional economic level. We focus on two dimensions emerging from two widely known organizational forms: the managerial corporation and the knowledge cluster with a marked orientation toward interfirm knowledge spillovers. We use an original data set of 146 U.S. cities to obtain variations in the extent to which they are populated by managerial firms or knowledge clusters. By utilizing city-level measures of managerial salaries, we test how the intensity of managerial corporation versus knowledge cluster characteristics affects the mean and dispersion of the "rewards" of cities. Our evidence suggests that higher managerial corporate characteristics lower the variability of rewards, while they have no effect on the mean of rewards. Higher-knowledge cluster characteristics produce both higher dispersion and higher expected rewards. We explain these results by looking at the different learning mechanisms of the two organizational types. In so doing, we highlight the role of intra- and interfirm knowledge processes as important sources of differences in the rewards of the two models. From an empirical point of view, results are confirmed using both patent-based and skill mobility-based measures of knowledge spillovers.
Review: PeerReviewed
Publisher version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/orsc.1090.0449
Keywords: Regional cluster
Organizational attributes
Knowledge spillovers
Managerial salaries
Appears in Collections:DEE - Artículos de Revistas

Refworks Export

SFX Query

Items in E-Archivo are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

 

Valid XHTML 1.0! © Universidad Carlos III de Madrid - Software DSpace - Terms of use - Feedback