Measuring and understanding hierarchy as an architectural element in industry sectors

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Measuring and understanding hierarchy as an a ...
Jianxi Luo, Daniel E. Whitney, ...
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Last edited by MARC Bot
December 31, 2022 | History

Measuring and understanding hierarchy as an architectural element in industry sectors

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In an industry setting, classic supply chains display strict hierarchy, whereas clusters of firms have linkages going in many different directions. Previous theory has often assumed the existence of the hierarchical relationships among firms and empirical work has focused on a single level of an industry or bilateral relationships. However, quantitative evidence on the deep hierarchy in large industrial sectors is lacking. In this paper, we develop metrics and methods to define and measure the degree of hierarchy in transactional relationships among firms, and apply the methods to two large industrial sectors in Japan: automotive and electronics. Our empirical analysis shows that the automotive sector exhibits a higher degree of hierarchy than the electronics sector. The empirical measurement and model analysis together indicate that it is the low transaction specificity that drives down the degree of hierarchy in the electronics sector. Differences in transaction patterns in turn may result from the differences in the power level of underlying technologies, which affect product specificity and asset specificity. Thus, the degree of hierarchy in an industry sector may be traced back to fundamental properties of the underlying technologies.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
46

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Book Details


Edition Notes

"May 2009"--p. 1.

"June 2009"--Publisher's website.

Includes bibliographical references.

Published in
[Boston]
Series
Working paper / Harvard Business School -- 09-144, Working paper (Harvard Business School) -- 09-144.

The Physical Object

Pagination
46 p.
Number of pages
46

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL45157978M
OCLC/WorldCat
542346419

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