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743 items in total found

Journal Articles | 2024

Who Benefits From Supplier Encroachment in the Presence of Manufacturing Cost Learning?

Ayush Gupta, Sachin Jayaswal, Benny Mantin

Manufacturing cost plays a crucial role in suppliers’ encroachment decisions. A high manufacturing cost impedes suppliers’ capacity to encroach. However, cost learning may reduce this cost sufficiently enough to make encroachment profitable for the supplier at a later point in time. Accordingly, he may have an incentive to boost production so as to promote cost learning. Thus, he may drop the wholesale price to induce the retailer to buy more. On the one hand, cost learning may enable encroachment, which may be detrimental to the retailer. On the other hand, cost learning results in a lower manufacturing cost which may translate into a lower future wholesale price, benefiting the retailer. Therefore, the retailer faces a dilemma: should she increase her order quantity to advance cost learning or not? As the retailer may order fewer units in the initial period to limit future direct channel sales, the supplier faces a challenge: should he, instead of dropping his initial wholesale price, raise it to signal his intention of not encroaching so as to induce the retailer to sell a higher quantity in the first period? We model the supplier–retailer interaction as a two-period Stackelberg game to address the retailer’s dilemma and to identify the optimal supplier response. We uncover a new outcome, which arises in the presence of cost learning, where the supplier encroaches but decides not to sell anything through the direct channel. In addition, we find that supplier encroachment may reduce or eliminate the retailer’s incentive to advance cost learning. This results in lower sales by the retailer, which impedes cost learning, leading to a higher future manufacturing cost (compared to the no encroachment setting). As a result, encroachment, which is typically viewed as advantageous for the supplier, may become detrimental to him. Surprisingly, the supplier continues to encroach and sell directly unless he can credibly assure the retailer that he will not encroach in the future.

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Journal Articles | 2024

In the driver’s seat: the role of transformational leadership in safe and productive truck cargo transport

Alexandros Pasparakis, Jelle de Vries, René de Koster, Debjit Roy

We present a bottom-up marketing approach as a pathway to addressing the grand challenge of poverty and inequality for the marketing discipline. We derive this approach from the research stream on radically different contexts of subsistence marketplaces. Research on subsistence marketplaces has typically explored micro-level phenomena but also traversed upward and explained aggregate phenomena at higher levels. We present a conceptual framework to encapsulate general and granular elements of the bottom-up marketing approach. Study 1 demonstrates general elements of the framework through a retrospective examination of the global diffusion of a marketplace literacy program. Study 2 demonstrates the more granular elements of the framework through a qualitative analysis of five case studies of social enterprise start-ups. Though presenting a complementary counter-perspective to conventional thinking, we embed the process of interweaving the bottom-up with the macro level to present an actionable approach. We conclude with insights for marketing research and practice.

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Journal Articles | 2024

Women at multiple levels of strategic leadership: Evidence of gender spillovers

Saneesh Edacherian, Amit Karna, Klaus Uhlenbruck, Sunil Sharma

Manuscript Type

Empirical.

Research Question/Issue

We examine how the combined presence of women in multiple levels of strategic leadership, including gender-diverse boards, affects firm accounting performance.

Research Findings/Insights

Our meta-analysis of 273 effect sizes across various hypotheses expands research on women in upper echelons by showing that gender-diverse boards are positively related to gender spillovers, that is, the appointment of female executives. Most importantly, our work demonstrates that gender spillovers mediate the relationship between board gender diversity and firm performance, indicating there are joint effects of women leaders when serving at various levels of the organization simultaneously. We also find that the size of gender-diverse boards negatively affects gender spillovers to the level of executives.

Theoretical/Academic Implications

Our research highlights interdependencies between gender diversity at different organizational levels and the distinct contribution of women directors. We draw attention to the role of gender spillovers as a mechanism that helps explain how the appointment of women directors benefits firm performance. Our findings broadly contribute to upper echelons theory.

Practitioner/Policy Implications

This study emphasizes that increasing the representation of women on boards can advance the cause of women at other levels of strategic leadership. Furthermore, if women are in multiple levels of strategic leadership at the same time, this can lead to improved firm performance.

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Journal Articles | 2024

Environmental Claims Under Indian Insolvency Law: Concepts and Challenges

M P Ram Mohan, Sriram Prasad

The intersection between claims arising from environmental liability and insolvency of the entity concerned has grown increasingly complex. Over the years, India has seen enactment of several laws and proactive judicial decisions to ensure liability from environmental harm is addressed through application of no-fault and absolute liability principles. A consequence of these principles is, if an entity harms the environment, they must bear the cost of clean-up. If the entity defaults on the compensation payment or is unable to pay, then, under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016 (IBC) they may be able declare insolvency. When admitted under insolvency, a moratorium on all claims is imposed. Once resolution has taken place, the corporate debtor is provided with a “fresh start”, relieving the debtor from all its previous debts and liabilities. If the debtor goes into liquidation through the waterfall mechanism, financial creditors are given priority over environmental claimants who would mostly be categorized either as contingent claimants or decree holders. In these scenarios, insolvency law supersedes environmental law/policy by design, creating a visible human rights implication. While the IBC seems to be agnostic to social causes, there are other avenues to deal with social causes, such as the Public Liability Insurance Act which deals with hazardous environmental accidents in a limited way. In the paper, we argue that insurance, compared to insolvency, provides a better framework to resolve environmental liabilities and that the insurance schemes should remain intact regardless of a fresh start.

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Journal Articles | 2024

‘Scandalous’ and ‘Obscene’ Trademark Law: Determining the Scope of Morality-based Proscriptions in Indian Law

M P Ram Mohan, Aditya Gupta

Morality-based restrictions on trademarks are prevalent in trademark legislations worldwide, existing in 163 out of 164 WTO member states. In 2019, the United States Supreme Court held that such restrictions fall afoul of their free speech jurisprudence. Yet, in the process, the Court explicitly emphasized the significance of linguistic regulation rooted in moral principles within trademark law. Despite having housed these provisions for over four decades, no legislative or judicial body has interpreted morality-based proscriptions in Indian law. The administrative practices of the Indian Trade Marks Registrar and a review of the Indian Trade Marks Register demonstrate extreme inconsistency and incoherence in applying the ban against ‘scandalous’ and ‘obscene’ content in Indian trade mark law. These findings highlight the urgent need for comprehensive guidelines that combine legislative heritage and insights from Australian law to establish a consistent framework for identifying the import and meaning of ‘scandal’ and ‘obscenity’ in Indian law.

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Journal Articles | 2024

Addressing grand challenges through the bottom-up marketing approach: Lessons from subsistence marketplaces and marketplace literacy

Madhu Viswanathan, Arun Srikumar, Srinivas Sridharan, Gaurav R. Sinha

We present a bottom-up marketing approach as a pathway to addressing the grand challenge of poverty and inequality for the marketing discipline. We derive this approach from the research stream on radically different contexts of subsistence marketplaces. Research on subsistence marketplaces has typically explored micro-level phenomena but also traversed upward and explained aggregate phenomena at higher levels. We present a conceptual framework to encapsulate general and granular elements of the bottom-up marketing approach. Study 1 demonstrates general elements of the framework through a retrospective examination of the global diffusion of a marketplace literacy program. Study 2 demonstrates the more granular elements of the framework through a qualitative analysis of five case studies of social enterprise start-ups. Though presenting a complementary counter-perspective to conventional thinking, we embed the process of interweaving the bottom-up with the macro level to present an actionable approach. We conclude with insights for marketing research and practice.

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Journal Articles | 2024

Opening First-Party App Resources: Empirical Evidence of Free-Riding

Franck Soh , Pankaj Setia, Varun Grover

Platform owners are releasing their own apps on their platforms. These first-party apps (FPAs) typically leverage platform resources more effectively, competitively threatening rivals. Although the impact of FPAs on rivals’ innovation has been the subject of extensive study, the dominant view in previous research assumes that these FPAs are closed to third-party apps (TPAs). However, there is an increasing trend of FPAs opening their resources to TPAs, as they provide application programming interfaces (APIs) allowing TPAs to access their resources. Rivals still exist, as many TPAs choose not to have access to FPAs’ open resources because of their limited control over these resources. Does opening an FPA’s resources impact rivals’ innovation? The answer to the question is largely unknown. We exploit the release of the Apple Health Records API, a feature that opens Apple Health Records to TPAs, to design a quasi-experiment that investigates whether and how opening an FPA’s resources influence rivals’ innovations. Through several analyses, we conclude that opening an FPA’s resources to TPAs generates free-riding benefits for rivals. Moreover, these benefits mainly arise because of the growing presence of TPAs that do not adopt FPAs’ open resources in the market. We discuss the theoretical contributions and practical implications of our findings.

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Journal Articles | 2024

Creating ‘safe’ spaces through exclusionary boundaries: Examining employers’ treatment of domestic workers during the COVID-19 pandemic in India

Vaibhavi Kulkarni, Namita Gupta, and Arohi Panicker

Our study illustrates how boundary mechanisms exacerbated the marginalization of paid domestic workers in India, after they resumed their employment at the end of the lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic. We draw upon in-depth interviews with the middle-class employers of these workers to show how the employers renegotiated boundary rules and created bubbles of safe interaction for themselves. We contribute to boundary theory by explaining how pre-existing symbolic boundaries intensify and materialize into social boundaries. Social boundaries often result in unequal access to resources, further increasing disparities. But how do these boundaries get invoked? What forms do they take? So far, we do not have enough empirical research examining the creation and maintenance of social boundaries. This study shows how social boundaries get created and stabilized within gated communities through deployment of material resources, regulations and routinization of boundary tactics. These exclusionary social boundaries are further strengthened by the presence of an external agency, emerging as a new and significant actor in the hitherto private employer–worker relationship. Finally, we note that these boundaries result in normalized differential treatment of domestic workers, thus accentuating the class divide.

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Journal Articles | 2024

The capacitated r-hub interdiction problem with congestion: Models and solution approaches.

Sneha Dhyani Bhatt, Ankur Sinha, Sachin Jayaswal

We study the 𝑟-hub interdiction problem under the case of possible congestion. Hub interdiction problems are modeled as attacker-defender problems to identify a set of 𝑟 critical hubs from a set of 𝑝 hubs, which when attacked, causes maximum damage to network restoration activities of the defender. In this work we consider that in addition to the routing cost, the defender also aims to minimize the congestion cost. Incorporating the congestion cost in the problem introduces non-linearity in the objective function of the interdiction problem, which makes the problem challenging to solve. To address this, we propose two alternate exact solution approaches. The first approach is an inner-approximation-based approach (IBA), which overestimates the convex non-linear objective function and provides an upper bound. A lower bound is obtained from solving the lower-level problem exactly corresponding to the upper bound solution. The upper bound is tightened using improved approximation with new points generated in successive iterations. In the second approach (referred to as SBA), the problem is reformulated as a second-order conic program, which can be solved using an off-the-shelf solver. From our computational experiments on benchmark datasets (CAB and AP), we demonstrate the efficacy of both the proposed methods. However, IBA consistently outperforms SBA by a significant margin.

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Journal Articles | 2024

Are green and healthy building labels counterproductive in emerging markets? An examination of office rental contracts in India

Anirban Banerjee, Prashant Das, Franz Fuerst

Financial prudence compels businesses to improve their Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) performance when the marginal benefits, pecuniary or non-pecuniary, exceed the marginal costs. For many firms, renting green offices is a feasible ESG activity which may increase their willingness to pay higher rents. Analyzing over 17,000 green rental contracts in India between 2010 and 2022, we find that rents in green-labeled assets and those with health certification command significant premiums between 4 and 21%. However, green rents increased much faster compared to their non-green counterparts, and the propensity to rent green varies significantly across industry segments. We further examine how the market for green offices evolved after a mandatory ESG Disclosure Requirement was enacted in India in 2021. We find that suppliers (landlords) benefited from the regulation by disproportionately increasing rental rates. Existing tenants and foreign firms ended up paying higher rental prices while most other firms, including the assumed target groups of the new policy, redirected their green commitment away from green buildings. Although the policy may yield more positive results in the longer run, a reduced propensity to rent green offices is the opposite of what the ESG Disclosure Requirement tried to achieve.

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IIMA