Board openness and family firm internationalization: a social capital perspective

Author(s)
Francesco Debellis, Mariateresa Torchia, Fabio Quarato, Andrea Calabrò
Abstract

Building upon social capital theory, this study investigates to what extent board openness to non-family directors affects family firm internationalization. We suggest that board compositions relate to different levels of bonding (internal) and bridging (external) social capital, which affect firm internationalization. In particular, we hypothesize a curvilinear relationship between the percentage of non-family directors in the board and FDI geographic scope. Moreover, we argue that firm age moderates the main relationship. Our analysis of a panel dataset of 7,707 family firms suggests a balanced juxtaposition of family and non-family directors in more mature firms is detrimental for FDI geographic scope. Moreover, our results show that, except for young family firms, broader FDI geographic scope emerges when the board is dominated by one homogeneous type (either family or non-family directors); however, boards dominated by non-family directors always lead to higher FDI geographic scope. We offer important theoretical insights to research on family firm internationalization, social capital, and corporate governance as well as managerial implications.

Organisation(s)
Department of Marketing and International Business
External organisation(s)
International University of Monaco, Università Commerciale Luigi Bocconi, IPAG Business School
Journal
Small Business Economics
Volume
60
Pages
1431-1448
No. of pages
18
ISSN
0921-898X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11187-022-00670-1
Publication date
04-2023
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
502016 SME-research
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Economics and Econometrics, Business, Management and Accounting(all)
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/board-openness-and-family-firm-internationalization-a-social-capital-perspective(657661c9-0f17-4e04-a257-b766505b448b).html