Parental control: A study of U.S. subsidiaries in Mexico

This study develops a framework that suggests that subsidiary characteristics, such as performance, purpose and manager nationality affect the extent of control and mechanisms of control (i.e., results, cultural and action controls) that their parent companies exercise over them. Hypotheses were tes...

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Published inInternational business review Vol. 18; no. 5; pp. 481 - 493
Main Authors Lovett, Steven Russell, Pérez-Nordtvedt, Liliana, Rasheed, Abdul A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.10.2009
Elsevier
SeriesInternational Business Review
Subjects
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ISSN0969-5931
1873-6149
DOI10.1016/j.ibusrev.2009.05.001

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Summary:This study develops a framework that suggests that subsidiary characteristics, such as performance, purpose and manager nationality affect the extent of control and mechanisms of control (i.e., results, cultural and action controls) that their parent companies exercise over them. Hypotheses were tested using survey responses from 44 Mexican subsidiary—U.S. parent dyads. As expected, results suggest that parental perceptions of subsidiary performance are inversely related to the extent of control that parent companies exercise over these subsidiaries. It was also found that subsidiaries established for purposes relating to a knowledge seeking motivation tended to be subject to more cultural control, but no support was found for the hypothesized relationships between market purpose and results control, and resource purpose and action control. Finally, also as predicted, Mexican managers tended to be subject to greater action control by their U.S. parent than American managers.
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ISSN:0969-5931
1873-6149
DOI:10.1016/j.ibusrev.2009.05.001