2007
DOI: 10.1002/smj.648
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Mimetic entry and bandwagon effect: the rise and decline of international equity joint venture in China

Abstract: The rise and decline of foreign entry strategies in transition economies is an important yet largely overlooked issue in the literature. This study is a step toward filling this gap by examining how mimetic entry within reference groups and the emergence of a competing strategy affect the bandwagon phenomenon of a dominant strategy in the context of China, where international equity joint ventures (EJVs) used to be a dominant entry strategy among foreign firms in the 1990s. Findings from a sample of 1,123 EJVs… Show more

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Cited by 108 publications
(109 citation statements)
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“…We selected these two industries for two additional reasons consistent with our theoretical framework. First, among all Chinese industries these two have some of the most open FDI policies, including a significant number of IJVs (Xia et al., 2008). Second, there have been a sufficient number of alliances within the industry to allow a large sample study capable of identifying a domestic alliance network and measuring firms' structural positions within the network.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We selected these two industries for two additional reasons consistent with our theoretical framework. First, among all Chinese industries these two have some of the most open FDI policies, including a significant number of IJVs (Xia et al., 2008). Second, there have been a sufficient number of alliances within the industry to allow a large sample study capable of identifying a domestic alliance network and measuring firms' structural positions within the network.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, Greve (1995) and Rao et al (2001) view decision makers as deciding to discontinue a practice based partly on information inferred from others discontinuing, yet they do not consider that information can also be inferred from decision makers initiating (or choosing to continue) the practice. Recent conceptual work (Terlaak and Gong 2008) and empirical studies have begun to rectify this; Greve (2011), Xia et al (2008), and Connelly et al (2011 all show that in the context of adoption, firms attend not only to adopters but also to abandoners and rejecters. Our study further supports this-we find that in the context of firm exit decisions, firms infer information from both exits and entries.…”
Section: Implications For Herding Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Prior studies have used this database in the investigation of international market entries (e.g., Xia, Tan, and Tan, 2008). Such overseas investments include equity joint ventures (JVs) and wholly owned subsidiaries established through mergers and acquisitions (M&As).…”
Section: Data and Samplementioning
confidence: 99%