Date & Time: November 19th, 2019 (Tuesday) & 01:30pm-03:00pm
Location: Room 114, College of Business, Shanghai University of Finance & Economics (100 Wudong Road)
Location in Chinese:武东路100号十大赌博正规信誉网址大楼114室
Speaker: 黄冬东,南洋理工大学
Abstract
I draw inspiration from the legitimacy perspective and political embeddedness theory to examine the effects of outside chief executive officers (CEOs) in globalizing Chinese firms on firm performance. Specifically, I argue that the fast-changing and turbulent market environment for globalizing firms from emerging markets will amplify the adaptive capability of outside CEOs and reduce the importance of organizational adaptation that inside CEOs enjoy. Hence, outside CEO succession will bring positive effects for the performance of globalizing Chinese firms. Moreover, such positive effects will be stronger in central state-owned enterprises (SOEs) due to their greater improved legitimacy perceived by stakeholders in host countries. In addition, the performance effects of outside CEOs will be even more positive in central SOEs with a Party Secretary that have work experience in both the government and industrial sectors, who helps outside CEOs better embedded in the home country political system. However, outside CEOs’ performance effects will less positive when there is a strong presence of Party Secretaries on the board of directors, which leads to over-embeddedness problems. I test my hypotheses using a sample of 251 globalizing Chinese firms listed on the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges. The results offer strong support for my arguments. The results point to the importance of alignment among CEO origin, market characteristics, legitimacy in host countries, and political embeddedness within the home country government for firm performance.