4.7 Article

Location choices across the value chain:: How activity and capability influence collocation

Journal

MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Volume 52, Issue 10, Pages 1457-1471

Publisher

INFORMS
DOI: 10.1287/mnsc.1060.0658

Keywords

FDI; location choice; firm heterogeneity

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There has been a recent revival of interest in the geographic component of firm strategy. Recent research suggests that two opposing forces-competition costs and agglomeration benefits-determine whether firms collocate in a given geographic market. Unexplored is (1) whether these forces have different impacts on R&D, production, and sales subsidiaries, leading to diverse collocation levels, and (2) how firm capabilities impact collocation by increasing or decreasing competition costs and agglomeration benefits. I explore these questions using the worldwide location decisions of firms in the cellular handset industry. I find that production and sales subsidiaries are more geographically dispersed, and R&D subsidiaries are more concentrated, than a random distribution would predict. When distinguishing firms by their capabilities, I find that more-capable firms collocate less than less-capable firms, regardless of the activity performed.

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