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The firm as an environmentconstructing entity

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Title: The firm as an environmentconstructing entity


1
The firm as an environment-constructing entity
Presentation for the Symposium on Evolutionary
Economics 2007 Puschino, Russia 14 September 2007
  • Pavel O. Luksha
  • http//www. luksha.ru pavel.luksha_at_gmail.com

2
Nature of the firm debate
  • Firm as a black box (autonomous and monolythic
    agent) in neoclassical theory
  • Transaction cost theory interpretations
  • fictionalist firm as a nexus of contracts that
    is a legal fiction (Alchian 1984 Jensen,
    Meckling, 1976)
  • aggregationist firm as a collection of real
    (non-human) assets that glue the firm (Hart,
    1989, 1995 Grossman, Hart, 1986)

3
Firm as a real entity
  • Real entity interpretations
  • entity emergent qualities of organizational
    level (system gt sum of parts)
  • views arising in old institutional school / legal
    studies (Dewey, Freund, Brown etc),
    resource-based view (Penrose, Barney, Grant etc.)
    etc.
  • real entity is typically defined by internal
    properties (Gindis, 2006, 2007)
  • need to be complemented by external properties
    (defined in relation to environment)

4
Firm as a real entity (2)
  • Crucial external property the firm as a real
    entity should have causal powers over its
    environment
  • We need to present instances and theory of the
    influence of causal power of the firm over its
    environment

5
Instances
  • Theoretical considerations include a number of
    cases where firms can change behaviour of their
    counterparts
  • impact on equilibrium in oligopoly rivalry
  • effects of product innovation
  • incentives (that provoke individuals/groups to
    act in a specific way)
  • signaling (e.g. advertising)
  • signal distortions (e.g. lemon market,
    agent-principal problem etc.)

6
Instances (2)
  • Important phenomenological evidences from
    business practice (ignored by theory), e.g.
  • demand side
  • preference shift evidences on manipulation of
    consumer preferences (Packard, 1957, Hastings et.
    al. 2003, Galst, White, 1976, Perrien et. al.
    1997, etc.)
  • loyalty building (de Chernatony, McDonald, 1992)
  • supply side
  • creation of customer-unique supplier clusters,
    ecogenesis (Normann, 2001)
  • non-market strategies (Baron, 1995) (e.g.lobbying)

7
Firm-environment relationship
  • Dominant paradigms were influenced by
    evolutionary thinking
  • adaptationist
  • selectionist
  • evolutionary non-reductionist
  • Paradigms that removed the issue whatsoever
  • fictionalist (firm / environment as a fiction)

8
Adaptationist
  • Approaches
  • neoclassical theory of the firm,
    structure-conduct-performance in industrial
    organization
  • dominating approach in organizational studies and
    strategic management
  • Firms adjust in response to threats
  • the environment has a causal power that induces
    modifications and transformations in firms
    (usually seen as change in arrangement of
    individuals)
  • firms have little or no ability to modify their
    environments

9
Selectionist
  • Approaches
  • (neo-Schumpeterian) evolutionary economic
    modeling
  • organizational ecology / environmental school of
    strategic management
  • Firms are selected by environmental forces
  • organizations are rigid, and can be selected out
    if environment changes
  • organizational success is ascribed to processes
    of selection, over which organizations have
    little or no control

10
Fictionalist
  • Bundles together two approaches that are usually
    considered separately
  • Organization as a fiction
  • transaction cost interpretations (and related)
  • Environment as a fiction
  • social constructivism sees environments as
    invented (Starbuck, 1976), having no independent
    existence (Smirich, Stubbart, 1985)
  • In both approaches, the firm-environment
    distinction / relationship dissolves. It is a way
    to deny rather to understand.

11
Evolutionary non-reductionist
  • Adaptationists / selectionists emphasize one
    aspect at the expense of other aspects (
    reductionism)
  • Non-reductionist approaches
  • multi-level evolution (Baum, Singh, 1994)
  • organization-environment coevolution (March,
    1994, Baum, Singh, 1994) many theoretical /
    empirical studies in recent years
  • Admits the ability to significantly modify
    environment, but does not set out explicit models
    of environment construction

12
Niche construction inspirations from
evolutionary biology
  • Domination of adaptationist / selectionist view
    in evolutionary biology
  • Gene-biased view
  • organism is but a mediator that translates
    natural selection pressures to help select
    genotypes (e.g. Dawkins)
  • Criticisms that help remove bias
  • organisms are active in their environments
    (Lewontin, Lloyd etc.)
  • niche construction (Odling-Smee et. al. 2003)
    ability to modify environmental pressures

13
Consideration of environment in adaptationist /
selectionist paradigm
Much of the traditional evolutionary studies
treat environment as complex and independent from
impact of population (adaptationist /
selectionist view)
disturban-ces
natural selection
? (E)
E
G
G f (G, E, ? (G))
variation
? (G)
E h (E, ? (E))
genetic inheritance
G gene pool of a given population of
organisms E environment for given population of
organisms
natural selection
E
G
from (Laland et al.,2000), amended by the
present author
14
Concept of niche construction
Niche construction the process whereby
organisms, through their metabolism, their
activities, and their choices, modify their own
and each others niches. Niche construction may
result in changes in one or more natural
selection pressures.
natural selection
E
G
? (E)
? (G)
niche construction
G f(G, E, ? (G))
environment inheritance
genetic inheritance
E h(G, E, ? (E))
natural selection
E
G
niche construction
from (Laland et al.,2000), amended by the
present author
15
Niche construction transplantation of a concept
Niche construction a change made to the
environment (outside the boundary of the firm)
that seriously impacts upon the decision making
of firms counterparts, implying long-lasting
alterations in their behavioural patterns
R f (R, E, ?(R)) E h (R, E, ?(E))
16
Niche construction transplantation of a concept
(2)
  • Organizations as significantly rigid structures
    (Hannan, Freeman, 1977, 1984 Staw et. al. 1981),
    preserved by reproduction of routines
  • Organizational strategies as manifests of
    organizational capabilities (organization-specific
    resources) (Penrose, 1959, PrahaladHamel, 1990,
    Grant, 1996)
  • Organizational environment plasticity as a
    consequence of individual / group learning
    capabilities

17
General classification of niche construction
18
Classified examples of niche construction in
business
19
Psychological mechanisms behind organizational
niche construction
  • Niche construction occurs due to learning of
    individuals / groups / organizations that
    constitute organizational environment
  • The situation of learning is induced by
    organization
  • Learning is multi-level (behavioural patterns,
    rules / habits, behavioural models)
  • Learnt behavioural patterns are maintained by
    mechanisms of remembering that help to retain
    individual / collective memory

20
Organizational mechanisms of niche construction
  • Organizations can operate in a legitimate way
    only within their own borders King Midas
    effect of organization
  • Organizations can only transcend their borders by
    communications, using media as extensions of
    themselves
  • Niche constructing effects are conveyed through
    communications (that establish demonstrations,
    reinforcements and learning contexts)

21
Institutional vehicles of niche construction
  • Niche constructing communications of the
    organization are structured (repeatedly
    transmitted) by purposefully established
    institutional vehicles
  • The institutional vehicle an inter-organizational
    structure involving the media, the counterparts,
    the supporting agencies bounded by contractual
    arrangement
  • Initialization of vehicle operation is within
    organizational routines
  • The outcome of vehicle operation new behavioural
    patterns / habits / behavioural models

22
Conclusions
  • Firm is a real entity views can be supported by
    evidences of environment constructing ability of
    organization
  • Firm-environment relation considerations are
    dominated by adaptationist / selectionist
    approaches
  • This situation closely mirrors mainstream views
    in evolutionary biology, criticized by a number
    of scholars (Lewontin etc.)

23
Conclusions (cont.)
  • Insights on active role of organisms (niche
    construction) can be transplanted to understand
    environment constructing role of organizations
    (creation/ modification of long-term behavioural
    patterns)
  • Evidences of organizational niche construction
    are multiple (demand side, supply side,
    non-market strategy)

24
Firm as an environment-constructing entity
  • The notion of the firm as an agent of adaptation
    and a subject of selection is contested. This
    notion is, at least, incomplete.
  • The firm is also an entity that actively creates
    its own environment, and adjusts the constraints
    of its own adaptation and selection
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