Captive Offshoring of New Product Development in Brazil: How Does Arbitrage Influence Local, Collaborative Relationships?

This paper focuses on captive offshoring of new product development (NPD), i. e., relocating projects or project phases to foreign-based, wholly-owned, multinational corporation (MNC) subsidiaries (captive offshore units) to benefit from cost and efficiency advantages and/or from access to complemen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Management international review 2010-12, Vol.50 (6), p.747-773
1. Verfasser: Boehe, Dirk M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This paper focuses on captive offshoring of new product development (NPD), i. e., relocating projects or project phases to foreign-based, wholly-owned, multinational corporation (MNC) subsidiaries (captive offshore units) to benefit from cost and efficiency advantages and/or from access to complementary technological resources and capabilities. Adopting a host country perspective, we theorize why different forms of local collaboration may complement or conflict with efficiency-seeking or arbitrage strategies and may thus influence why captive offshore units receive new product development orders from other MNC units located abroad. Using a sample from Brazil and applying structural equation modeling with partial least squares (PLS), we find that local NPD outsourcing constitutes a complementary relationship, while local cooperation with clients creates a trade-off relationship with captive offshoring. That these relationships are moderated by the captive offshore unit's cost position within the MNC suggests that arbitrage effects transcend the headquarter-subsidiary relationship into the sphere of MNC subsidiaries' local collaborations. Our findings imply that arbitrage in multinational contexts affects the interdependence between resources and transaction costs.
ISSN:0938-8249
1861-8901
DOI:10.1007/s11575-010-0054-z