American Economic Review
ISSN 0002-8282 (Print) | ISSN 1944-7981 (Online)
Capturing Knowledge within and across Firm Boundaries: Evidence from Clinical Development
American Economic Review
vol. 94,
no. 5, December 2004
(pp. 1591–1612)
Abstract
How do firm boundaries influence employees' acquisition of information? Using detailed project-level data and qualitative evidence, I document that pharmaceutical firms are more likely to outsource the coordination of data-intensive clinical trials, while they are more likely to assign knowledge-intensive trials to internal teams. Managers do not choose between market and hierarchy, but between the hierarchy of the firm—in which subjective performance evaluations are combined with flat explicit incentives—and the hierarchy of its subcontractor—whose virtue stems precisely from the ability to provide high-powered incentives on a narrow set of monitorable tasks.Citation
Azoulay, Pierre. 2004. "Capturing Knowledge within and across Firm Boundaries: Evidence from Clinical Development." American Economic Review, 94 (5): 1591–1612. DOI: 10.1257/0002828043052259JEL Classification
- D23 Organizational Behavior; Transaction Costs; Property Rights
- L24 Contracting Out; Joint Ventures; Technology Licensing
- L65 Chemicals; Rubber; Drugs; Biotechnology
- O32 Management of Technological Innovation and R&D