Publication | Closed Access
The Impact of Acquisitions on Innovation: Poison Pill, Placebo, or Tonic?
386
Citations
93
References
2004
Year
Innovation EvaluationInnovation AdoptionInnovation ManagementCorporate InnovationNational Innovation PoliciesManagementTechnological InnovationIntellectual PropertyPoison PillTime-series DataMergers And AcquisitionsPharmaceutical FirmsInnovation EconomicsInternal Knowledge DevelopmentStrategic ManagementInnovationMarketingFinanceInnovation StudyBusinessKnowledge Management
Do acquisitions increase, decrease, or have no effect on innovation? The empirical research on this question suggests that acquisitions may hurt innovation; that is, they may be a “poison pill” for innovation. The authors present an alternative view. For firms that first engage in internal knowledge development, the knowledge-based view the authors present suggests that acquisitions can help innovation; that is, they can be a tonic for innovation. Analysis of cross-sectional, time-series data on a sample of pharmaceutical firms during 1988–97 provides evidence to support the thesis.
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