Liquidity Events and the Geographic Distribution of Entrepreneurial Activity
Top Cited Papers
- 22 June 2003
- journal article
- Published by JSTOR in Administrative Science Quarterly
- Vol. 48 (2) , 175-201
- https://doi.org/10.2307/3556656
Abstract
In this paper, we examine the ecological consequences of initial public offerings (IPOs) and acquisitions, specifically how the spatial distribution of these events influences the location-specific founding rates of new companies. We explore whether relatively small spatial units (metropolitan statistical areas) in close geographic proximity to firms that recently have been acquired or experienced an IPO exhibit high new venture creation rates and whether the magnitudes of these effects depend on regional differences in statutes governing the freedom of employees to move between employers. Count models of biotechnology firm foundings establish three findings: (1) IPOs of organizations located contiguous to or within an MSA accelerate the founding rate within that MSA, (2) acquisitions of biotech firms situated near to or within an MSA accelerate the founding rate within the MSA, but only when the acquirer enters from outside of the biotech industry, and (3) the enforceability of post-employment non-compete covenants, which is determined at the state level, strongly moderates these effects.Keywords
This publication has 55 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Red Queen in organizational creation and developmentIndustrial and Corporate Change, 2002
- The Promotion Paradox: Organizational Mortality and Employee Promotion Chances in Silicon Valley Law Firms, 1946–1996American Journal of Sociology, 2001
- Aging, Obsolescence, and Organizational InnovationAdministrative Science Quarterly, 2000
- Sifting and Sorting: Personal Contacts and Hiring in a Retail BankAmerican Sociological Review, 1997
- Institutions, Intergroup Competition, and the Evolution of Hotel Populations Around Niagara FallsAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1996
- The Demographic Metabolism of Organizations: Industry Dynamics, Turnover, and Tenure DistributionsAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1995
- Organizational Evolution in a Multinational Context: Entries of Automobile Manufacturers in Belgium, Britain, France, Germany, and ItalyAmerican Sociological Review, 1995
- Density dependence in the organizational evolution of the American brewing industry across different levels of analysisSocial Science Research, 1991
- Legal Environments and Organizational Governance: The Expansion of Due Process in the American WorkplaceAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1990
- Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and CeremonyAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1977