Publication | Closed Access
Formal control and social control in domestic and international buyer–supplier relationships
308
Citations
90
References
2009
Year
International ManagementEconomicsSupplier RelationshipSurvey DataFormal ControlTradeManagementBusinessClient-supplier RelationshipsInternational Buyer–supplier RelationshipsSupply ChainSupply Chain ManagementSocial ControlInternational BusinessGlobal StrategyInterorganizational RelationshipSupply ManagementManagerial Control Systems
Abstract Focusing on long‐term buyer–supplier relationships, this article addresses two questions: (1) What are the antecedents that lead to the adoption of formal control, social control, or both? (2) What is the nature of the relationship between formal control and social control ‐ are they substitutes or complements? We develop a model to investigate the impact of the length of cooperation and institutionalization on the use of control mechanisms. Further, we argue that in China, formal control and social control may be substitutes in domestic buyer–supplier relationships, but they may be complements in international relationships. Survey data collected nationwide with executives in 380 domestic and 200 international buyer–supplier relationships in China are used to test our hypotheses.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1