Article ID: | iaor200784 |
Country: | United States |
Volume: | 17 |
Issue: | 3 |
Start Page Number: | 333 |
End Page Number: | 352 |
Publication Date: | May 2006 |
Journal: | Organization Science |
Authors: | Khanna Tarun, Rivkin Jan W. |
Keywords: | developing countries |
We identify which types of ties best distinguish pairs of Chilean firms in the same business group from pairs of Chilean firms that are not group brethren. Overlap in owners, indirect equity holdings, and director interlocks are especially strong delineators of group boundaries. Family connections and direct equity holdings do not do as good a job of distinguishing group boundaries. These findings challlenge the longstanding conventional wisdom among field-based scholars that family bonds are the defining feature of business groups in emerging markets. We speculate that family bonds are so durable that, over time, they come to pervade the entirety of an economy and lose their ability to distinguish business groups from the overall network of social and economical ties. Our techniques to identify business groups may apply to research on other types of groups – interpersonal and interorganizational – in which ties among actors are multiplex, ties are only partly observed, and group definitions are socially constructed.