Purposive Diversification and Economic Performance
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:25th Jun '93
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£30.99(9780521022583)
Exploring hypotheses about purposive diversification and ensuing economic performance, this study offers insights into the debate about cooperation versus competition among firms.
This book examines product-line diversification in large manufacturing firms. It introduces and applies a methodology that discerns groups of manufacturing industries related by complementarities in production, marketing, distribution, and research and development (R&D) activities. Manufacturing firms intentionally vary production to exploit these complementarities, and Professor Scott uses evidence from US manufacturing to explore hypotheses about such purposive diversification and ensuing economic performance, including product diversification's effects on both static efficiency and the optimality of R&D investment. The study offers insights into the policy debate about cooperation versus competition among firms: will industrial performance be better if leading firms cooperate on research, production, and marketing? Professor Scott shows that the answers depend on circumstances that vary with different industrial environments. His analysis offers insights about business strategy and public policy toward business combinations in conglomerate, vertical, and horizontal mergers and in cooperative R&D ventures.
'John Scott has produced an encompassing work on the incentives for diversification and its ramifications … The book is good. It is specific to the topic of purposive diversification. But within that topic, it is complete.' David I. Rosenbaum, Review of Industrial Organization
ISBN: 9780521430159
Dimensions: 237mm x 158mm x 21mm
Weight: 532g
284 pages