Industrial Development Through Tacit Knowledge Seeding: Evidence from the Bangladesh Garment Industry

We explore how the establishment of an industry pioneer through foreign seeding of industry knowledge can subsequently catalyze the growth of a developing country's industry by involuntarily propagating the knowledge to subsequent entrants. As industry knowledge has tacit elements, we focus on mechanisms that enable experienced workers from the pioneer to seed the knowledge to new entrants. We examine the relationship between entrants' characteristics and the mechanisms exploited to access the industry knowledge, and the impact of the mechanisms exploited on firm performance. Empirical findings from two historical episodes in the Bangladesh garment industry suggest that industry knowledge seeding was essential for the initial establishment and subsequent expansion of the industry. Our paper highlights the role of experienced workers' mobility in building new firm capabilities and provides novel insights into industrialization in developing economies. This paper was accepted by Bruno Cassiman, business strategy.

[1]  W. Boeker Executive Migration and Strategic Change: The Effect of Top Manager Movement on Product-Market Entry , 1997 .

[2]  Romel Mostafa Economic Growth One Industry at a Time: Entrepreneurship in the Bangladesh Garment Industry - Dissertation Executive Summary , 2009 .

[3]  Mark J. Roberts,et al.  The Decision to Export in Colombia: An Empirical Model of Entry with Sunk Costs , 1997 .

[4]  John Sutton,et al.  Competing in Capabilities: The Globalization Process , 2012 .

[5]  B. Kogut,et al.  Exploring internal stickiness : Impediments to the transfer of best practice within the firm , 2007 .

[6]  M. Muendler,et al.  Preparing to Export , 2013, SSRN Electronic Journal.

[7]  Minyuan Zhao,et al.  Doing R & D in Countries with Weak IPR Protection : Can Corporate Management Substitute for Legal Institutions ? , 2004 .

[8]  J. Heckman Dummy Endogenous Variables in a Simultaneous Equation System , 1977 .

[9]  B. Kogut,et al.  Localization of Knowledge and the Mobility of Engineers in Regional Networks , 1999 .

[10]  Ann E. Harrison,et al.  Do Domestic Firms Benefit from Direct Foreign Investment? Evidence from Venezuela , 1999 .

[11]  Bruno Cassiman,et al.  Innovation and internationalization through exports , 2011 .

[12]  R. Nelson,et al.  Debt Sustainability Under Catastrophic Risk: The Case for Government Budget Insurance , 1997 .

[13]  Jeffrey M. Woodbridge Econometric Analysis of Cross Section and Panel Data , 2002 .

[14]  B. Javorcik Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms? In Search of Spillovers Through Backward Linkages , 2002 .

[15]  Thérèse Bélot Export catalysts in low-income countries : a review of eleven success stories , 1990 .

[16]  Ramana Nanda,et al.  Diasporas and Domestic Entrepreneurs: Evidence from the Indian Software Industry , 2009 .

[17]  Olav Sorenson,et al.  Home Sweet Home: Entrepreneurs' Location Choices and the Performance of Their Ventures , 2010, Manag. Sci..

[18]  A. Stinchcombe Social Structure and Organizations , 2000, Political Organizations.

[19]  Peter K. Schott Across-Product Versus Within-Product Specialization in International Trade , 2004 .

[20]  L. Kolvereid Growth aspirations among Norwegian entrepreneurs , 1992 .

[21]  Toby E. Stuart,et al.  Liquidity Events and the Geographic Distribution of Entrepreneurial Activity , 2003 .

[22]  Larry Samuelson,et al.  The Growth and Failure of U. S. Manufacturing Plants , 1989 .

[23]  K. Hoff Bayesian learning in an infant industry model , 1997 .

[24]  Dyuti Banerjee,et al.  Labour market signalling and job turnover revisited , 2004 .

[25]  E. Penrose The theory of the growth of the firm twenty-five years after , 1960 .

[26]  Elhanan Helpman,et al.  Trade, FDI, and the Organization of Firms , 2006 .

[27]  A. Banerjee,et al.  Occupational Choice and the Process of Development , 1993, Journal of Political Economy.

[28]  Glenn R. Carroll,et al.  The fates of De Novo and De Alio producers in the American Automobile Industry 1885–1981 , 2007 .

[29]  E. Hippel Sticky Information and the Locus of Problem Solving: Implications for Innovation , 1994 .

[30]  April Franco,et al.  KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER THROUGH INHERITANCE: SPIN- OUT GENERATION, DEVELOPMENT, AND SURVIVAL , 2004 .

[31]  Constance E. Helfat,et al.  The birth of capabilities: market entry and the importance of pre-history , 2002 .

[32]  Peter Thompson,et al.  Disagreements and Intra-industry Spinoffs , 2010 .

[33]  Pranab Bardhan,et al.  On Optimum Subsidy to a Learning Industry: An Aspect of the Theory of Infant Industry Protection , 1971 .

[34]  P. Romer Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth , 1986, Journal of Political Economy.

[35]  J. Faaland,et al.  Bangladesh: The test case of development , 1976 .

[36]  Aaron K. Chatterji,et al.  Spawned with a silver spoon? Entrepreneurial performance and innovation in the medical device industry , 2009 .

[37]  A. Bernard,et al.  Exceptional Exporter Performance: Cause, Effect, or Both? , 1997 .

[38]  William R. Kerr,et al.  Ethnic Scientific Communities and International Technology Diffusion , 2007, The Review of Economics and Statistics.

[39]  R. Grant Toward a Knowledge-Based Theory of the Firm,” Strategic Management Journal (17), pp. , 1996 .

[40]  Nicholas Argyres,et al.  Knowledge Inheritance, Vertical Integration, and Entrant Survival in the Early U.S. Auto Industry , 2015 .

[41]  D. McKenzie,et al.  Does Management Matter? Evidence from India , 2011 .

[42]  S. Klepper Employee Startups in High‐Tech Industries , 2001 .

[43]  Francesco Lissoni,et al.  Knowledge codification and the geography of innovation: the case of Brescia mechanical cluster , 2001 .

[44]  James B. Wade,et al.  A Good Riddance? Spin-Offs and the Technological Performance of Parent Firms , 2009, Organ. Sci..

[45]  Paul Krugman,et al.  A Model of Innovation, Technology Transfer, and the World Distribution of Income , 1979, Journal of Political Economy.

[46]  Saul Lach,et al.  Is "Learning-by-Exporting" Important? Micro-Dynamic Evidence from Colombia, Mexico and Morocco , 1996 .

[47]  Steven Klepper,et al.  Heritage and Agglomeration: The Akron Tyre Cluster Revisited , 2009 .

[48]  D. McFadden Econometric analysis of qualitative response models , 1984 .

[49]  Beata K. Smarzynska Does Foreign Direct Investment Increase the Productivity of Domestic Firms , 2002 .

[50]  D. Teece Profiting from technological innovation: Implications for integration, collaboration, licensing and public policy , 1993 .

[51]  D. McFadden,et al.  Specification tests for the multinomial logit model , 1984 .

[52]  M. Good Technology and Trade , 1996 .

[53]  P. Romer Two Strategies for Economic Development: Using Ideas and Producing Ideas , 1992 .

[54]  Olav Sorenson,et al.  The embedded entrepreneur , 2009 .

[55]  P. Krugman Geography and Trade , 1992 .

[56]  M. Polanyi Chapter 7 – The Tacit Dimension , 1997 .

[57]  April M. Franco,et al.  Knowledge Diffusion through Employee Mobility , 2000 .

[58]  Birger Wernerfelt,et al.  The link between resources and type of diversification: Theory and evidence , 1991 .

[59]  Elkin Olaguer Pérez Sánchez,et al.  Measurement of potential absorption capacity in Colombia's innovative companies , 2017 .

[60]  B. Kogut,et al.  Knowledge of the Firm, Combinative Capabilities, and the Replication of Technology , 1992 .

[61]  Timothy Bates Entrepreneur Human Capital Inputs and Small Business Longevity , 1990 .

[62]  Lori Rosenkopf,et al.  Overcoming Local Search Through Alliances and Mobility , 2003, Manag. Sci..

[63]  Elhanan Helpman,et al.  Quality Ladders and Product Cycles , 1989 .

[64]  Y. Rhee The catalyst model of development: Lessons from Bangladesh's success with garment exports , 1990 .

[65]  D. Rodrik,et al.  Economic Development as Self-Discovery , 2002 .

[66]  Jan Fagerberg,et al.  Technology and International Differences in Growth Rates , 1994 .

[67]  James J. Anton,et al.  Start-ups, Spin-offs, and Internal Projects , 1995 .

[68]  S. Zahra,et al.  Absorptive Capacity: A Review, Reconceptualization, and Extension , 2002 .

[69]  J. Pfeffer,et al.  Environments of Organizations , 1976 .

[70]  Martin Fransman,et al.  Technology and economic development , 1986 .

[71]  Steven Klepper,et al.  Entry by Spinoffs , 2005, Manag. Sci..

[72]  Daniel A. Levinthal,et al.  ABSORPTIVE CAPACITY: A NEW PERSPECTIVE ON LEARNING AND INNOVATION , 1990 .

[73]  M. Quddus,et al.  Entrepreneurs and economic development: The remarkable story of garment exports from Bangladesh , 2000 .

[74]  Andrea Fosfuri,et al.  Foreign direct investment and spillovers through workers’ mobility , 2001 .

[75]  Steven Klepper,et al.  Spinoffs: A review and synthesis , 2009 .

[76]  S. Winter Knowledge and Competence as Strategic Assets , 1987 .

[77]  Bruno Cassiman,et al.  Optimal Project Rejection and New Firm Start-Ups , 2002, Manag. Sci..

[78]  P. Bustos Trade Liberalization, Exports, and Technology Upgrading: Evidence on the Impact of MERCOSUR on Argentinian Firms , 2011 .

[79]  A. Amsden,et al.  Review of: The Rise of "The Rest": Challenges to the West from Late Industrializing Economies , 2001 .

[80]  G. Gereffi International trade and industrial upgrading in the apparel commodity chain , 1999 .