4. When More Is Not Better: Complementarities, Costs, and Contingencies in Stakeholder Management

—Roberto Garcia-Castro (rgarcia@iese.edu), IESE Business School

—Claude Francoeur, HEC, Montreal

Abstract

Instrumental stakeholder theory has largely emphasized the positive effects of investing in stakeholder cooperative relationships in an additive, lineal fashion in the sense that the more investments the better. Yet investing in stakeholders can be costly, and the effects of these investments in firm performance are subject to complex internal complementarities and external contingencies. In this article we rely on set-theoretic methods and a large international dataset of 1,060 multinational companies to explore theoretically and empirically ...

Get Research in the Decision Sciences for Innovations in Global Supply Chain Networks: Best Papers from the 2014 Annual Conference now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.