Intangible resources and organization capital: measurement and economic evaluation

Intangible resources have raised the interests of scholars from different research areas due to their importance as crucial factors for firm performance; yet, contributions to this field still lack a theoretical framework. This research analyses the state-of-the-art results reached in the literat...

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Main Author: Tronconi, Claudia <1979>
Other Authors: Montresor, Sandro
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:en
Published: Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/763/
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spelling ndltd-unibo.it-oai-amsdottorato.cib.unibo.it-7632014-03-24T16:27:13Z Intangible resources and organization capital: measurement and economic evaluation Tronconi, Claudia <1979> SECS-P/01 Economia politica Intangible resources have raised the interests of scholars from different research areas due to their importance as crucial factors for firm performance; yet, contributions to this field still lack a theoretical framework. This research analyses the state-of-the-art results reached in the literature concerning intangibles, their main features and evaluation problems and models. In search for a possible theoretical framework, the research draws a kind of indirect analysis of intangibles through the theories of the firm, their critic and developments. The heterodox approaches of the evolutionary theory and resource-based view are indicated as possible frameworks. Based on this theoretical analysis, organization capital (OC) is identified, for its features, as the most important intangible for firm performance. Empirical studies on the relationship intangibles-firm performance have been sporadic and have failed to reach firm conclusions with respect to OC; in the attempt to fill this gap, the effect of OC is tested on a large sample of European firms using the Compustat Global database. OC is proxied by capitalizing an income statement item (Selling, General and Administrative expenses) that includes expenses linked to information technology, business process design, reputation enhancement and employee training. This measure of OC is employed in a cross-sectional estimation of a firm level production function - modeled with different functional specifications (Cobb-Douglas and Translog) - that measures OC contribution to firm output and profitability. Results are robust and confirm the importance of OC for firm performance. Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna Montresor, Sandro 2008-06-26 Doctoral Thesis PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/763/ info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language en
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic SECS-P/01 Economia politica
spellingShingle SECS-P/01 Economia politica
Tronconi, Claudia <1979>
Intangible resources and organization capital: measurement and economic evaluation
description Intangible resources have raised the interests of scholars from different research areas due to their importance as crucial factors for firm performance; yet, contributions to this field still lack a theoretical framework. This research analyses the state-of-the-art results reached in the literature concerning intangibles, their main features and evaluation problems and models. In search for a possible theoretical framework, the research draws a kind of indirect analysis of intangibles through the theories of the firm, their critic and developments. The heterodox approaches of the evolutionary theory and resource-based view are indicated as possible frameworks. Based on this theoretical analysis, organization capital (OC) is identified, for its features, as the most important intangible for firm performance. Empirical studies on the relationship intangibles-firm performance have been sporadic and have failed to reach firm conclusions with respect to OC; in the attempt to fill this gap, the effect of OC is tested on a large sample of European firms using the Compustat Global database. OC is proxied by capitalizing an income statement item (Selling, General and Administrative expenses) that includes expenses linked to information technology, business process design, reputation enhancement and employee training. This measure of OC is employed in a cross-sectional estimation of a firm level production function - modeled with different functional specifications (Cobb-Douglas and Translog) - that measures OC contribution to firm output and profitability. Results are robust and confirm the importance of OC for firm performance.
author2 Montresor, Sandro
author_facet Montresor, Sandro
Tronconi, Claudia <1979>
author Tronconi, Claudia <1979>
author_sort Tronconi, Claudia <1979>
title Intangible resources and organization capital: measurement and economic evaluation
title_short Intangible resources and organization capital: measurement and economic evaluation
title_full Intangible resources and organization capital: measurement and economic evaluation
title_fullStr Intangible resources and organization capital: measurement and economic evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Intangible resources and organization capital: measurement and economic evaluation
title_sort intangible resources and organization capital: measurement and economic evaluation
publisher Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna
publishDate 2008
url http://amsdottorato.unibo.it/763/
work_keys_str_mv AT tronconiclaudia1979 intangibleresourcesandorganizationcapitalmeasurementandeconomicevaluation
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