2019
DOI: 10.22495/cgsrv3i1p1
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Family cumulative knowledge and firm’s financial performance: An empirical investigation of the wine companies’ governance

Abstract: Family business is one of the most common governance systems worldwide and it is very successful in industries with strong cultural traditions, as the wine business. The literature still disagrees on whether the familiar corporate structure increases performance or not. Our empirical paper aims to investigate the effect of a long-term company culture in terms of economic performance and firm value. Is it possible to track the cumulative knowledge (passed from father to son) into firm economic returns? Using a … Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
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“…Rau, Werner, and Schell (2018) based on their study of firms in Germany find that innovation output decreases over the generations, but if the third and later generation owner-managers are not only legal owners but also have high levels of psychological ownership, then they are highly successful and innovative as their earlier generation of owners. A study of Italian wine companies by Marsigalia, Giovannini, and Palumbo (2019) shows that a long history of generational successions is likely to exert a positive influence on the firm's returns and also in terms of brand image, reputation and cumulative know-how. Thus, if family ownership improves firm's performance, then shareholdings of the family in the firm is expected to be positively related to executive pay.…”
Section: Firm Ownership Pattern and Executive Remunerationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rau, Werner, and Schell (2018) based on their study of firms in Germany find that innovation output decreases over the generations, but if the third and later generation owner-managers are not only legal owners but also have high levels of psychological ownership, then they are highly successful and innovative as their earlier generation of owners. A study of Italian wine companies by Marsigalia, Giovannini, and Palumbo (2019) shows that a long history of generational successions is likely to exert a positive influence on the firm's returns and also in terms of brand image, reputation and cumulative know-how. Thus, if family ownership improves firm's performance, then shareholdings of the family in the firm is expected to be positively related to executive pay.…”
Section: Firm Ownership Pattern and Executive Remunerationmentioning
confidence: 99%