Small Worlds e Board Interlocking no Brasil: estudo longitudinal das Redes Corporativas, 1997-2007 Outros Idiomas

ID:
4552
Resumo:
A Análise de Redes Sociais (ARS) é um campo emergente de pesquisa em Finanças, sobretudo no Brasil. De forma pioneira, este trabalho apoia-se em referenciais de diferentes áreas do conhecimento: análise de redes sociais e governança corporativa, para tratar um tópico similarmente emergente em finanças, o board interlocking, o objetivo é verificar a validade do modelo de small worlds no mercado de capitais brasileiro e a existência de associações entre o posicionamento da firma na rede de relações corporativas e o seu valor. Para tanto, foram empregados dados oficiais relativos a mais de 400 empresas listadas no Brasil entre 1997 e 2007. Os principais resultados obtidos sugerem que a configuração das redes de relações entre os membros de conselhos e entre empresas reflete o modelo de small world. Além disso, parece existir uma relação significativa entre a centralidade da firma e o seu valor, descrita segundo uma curva do tipo “U invertido”, o que sugere a existência de valores ótimos de proeminência social na rede corporativa.
Citação ABNT:
MENDES-DA-SILVA, W.Small Worlds and Board Interlocking in Brazil: a longitudinal study of Corporate Networks, 1997-2007. Revista Brasileira de Finanças, v. 9, n. 4, art. 167, p. 521-548, 2011.
Citação APA:
Mendes-da-silva, W.(2011). Small Worlds and Board Interlocking in Brazil: a longitudinal study of Corporate Networks, 1997-2007. Revista Brasileira de Finanças, 9(4), 521-548.
Link Permanente:
https://www.spell.org.br/documentos/ver/4552/small-worlds-e-board-interlocking-no-brasil--estudo-longitudinal-das-redes-corporativas--1997-2007/i/pt-br
Tipo de documento:
Artigo
Idioma:
Inglês
Referências:
Baum, Joel A. C., Rowley, Timothy J., & Shipilov, Andrew V. 2004. The Small World of Canadian Capital Markets: Statistical Mechanics of Investment Bank Syndicate Networks, 1952-1989. Canadian Journal of Administration Sciences, 21, 307–325.

Bearden, James, Atwood, William, Freitag, Peter, Hendricks, Carol, Mintz, Beth, & Schwartz, Michael. 1975. The Nature and Extent of Bank Centrality in Corporate Network. Working paper, State University of New York at Stony Brook, Department of Sociology.

Bouwman, Christa H. S. 2009. Corporate Governance Propagation Through Overlapping Directors. Working Paper MIT Sloan School of Management. Available at http://web.mit.edu/cbouwman/www/downloads/ BouwmanCorpGovPropagation.pdf. Accessed on September 30, 2010.

Bunderson, Stuart J. 2003. Recognizing and Utilizing Expertise in Work Groups: A Status Characteristics Perspective. Administrative Science Quarterly, 48, 557–591.

Burt, Ronald S. 1992. Structural Holes: The Social Structure of Competition. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Chung, Kee H., & Pruitt, Stephen W. 1994. A Simple Approximation of Tobin’s Q. Financial Management, 23, 70–74.

Cohen, Lauren, Frazzini, Andrea, & Maloy, Christopher. 2008. The Small World of Investing: Board Connections and Mutual Fund Returns. Journal of Political Economy, 116, 951–979.

Cohen, Lauren, Frazzini, Andrea, & Maloy, Christopher. 2010. Sell-Side School Ties. The Journal of Finance, 65, 1409–1437.

Coleman, James S. 1990. Foundations of Social Theory. University of Chicago Press, Chicago. Conyon, Martin J., & Muldoon, Mark R. 2006. The Small World of Corporate Boards. Journal of Business Finance & Accounting, 33, 1321–1343.

Conyon, Martin J., & Muldoon, Mark R. 2006. The Small World of Corporate Boards. Journal of Business Finance & Accounting, 33, 1321–1343.

Davis, Gerald F., & Greve, Henrich R. 1997. Corporate Elite Networks and Governance Changes in the 1980’s. American Journal of Sociology, 103, 1–37.

Davis, Gerald F., Yoo, Mina, & Baker, Wayne E. 2003. The Small World of Corporate Elite, 1982–2001. Strategic Organization, 1, 301–326.

Erdos, Paul, & R´enyi, Alfred. 1959. On Random Graphs. Publ. Math. Debrecen, 6, 290–297.

Fama, Eugene F., & Jensen, Michael C. 1983. Separation of Ownership and Control. Journal of Law Economics, 26, 301–325.

Fich, Eliezer M., & Shivdasani, Anil. 2006. Are Busy Boards Effective Monitors? Journal of Finance, 61, 689–724.

Fracassi, Cesare, & Tate, Geoffrey. 2011. External Networking and Internal Firm Governance. Journal of Finance. Forthcoming. Available at: http:// www.afajof.org/jouranl/forth_abstract.asp?ref=694. Accessed on September 30, 2011.

Freeman, Linton C. 1979. Centrality in Social Networks: Conceptual Clarification. Social Networks, 1, 215–239.

Harris, Ira C., & Shimizu, Katsuhiko. 2004. Too Busy To Serve? An Examination of the Influence of Overboarded Directors. Journal of Management Studies, 41, 775–798.

Haunschild, Pamela R. 1993. Interorganizational Imitation: The Impact of Interlocks on Corporate Acquisition Activity. Administrative Science Quarterly, 38, 564–592.

Hsiao, Cheng. 2005. Analysis of Panel Data. 2nd edn. New York: Cambridge University Press.

Instituto Brasileiro de Governança Corporativa. 2009. Codigo de Melhores Praticas de Governanca Corporativa ´ . Available at: http://www.ibgc.org. br/CodigoMelhoresPraticas.aspx. Accessed on September 30, 2011.

Jackson, Matthew O. 2008. Social and Economic Networks. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Kilduff, Martin. 1992. The Friendship Network as a Decision-Making Resource: Dispositional Moderators of Social Influences on Organizational Choice. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 62, 168–180.

Labianca, Giuseppe, & Brass, Daniel J. 2006. Exploring the Social Ledger: Negative Relationships and Negative Asymmetry in Social Networks in Organizations. Academy of Management Review, 31, 596–614.

Lazzarini, S´ergio G. 2007. Mudar Tudo Para N˜ao Mudar Anda: An´alise Da Dinˆamica de Redes de Propriet´arios No Brasil Como ‘Mundos Pequenos’.RAE-Eletronica. Available at: http://rae.fgv.br/sites/rae. fgv.br/files/artigos/10.1590_S1676-56482007000100008. Accessed on September 30, 2011.

Leitner, Yaron. 2005. Financial Networks: Contagion, Commitment, and Private Sector Bailouts. Journal of Finance, 60, 2925–2953.

Lin, Nan. 2001. Social Capital: A Theory of Social Structure and Action. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Martınez-Jaramillo, Serafiın, P´erez, Omar P., Embriz, Fernando A., & Dey, Fabrizio L. G. 2010. Systemic Risk, Financial Contagion and Financial Fragility. Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 34, 2358–2374.

Mehra, Ajay, Kilduff, Martin, & Brass, Daniel J. 2001. The Social Networks of High and Low Self-Monitors: Implications for Workplace Performance. Administrative Science Quarterly, 46, 121–146.

Mendes-Da-Silva, Wesley, Brito, Thaıs, Fam´a, Rubens, & Liljegren, Jonathan T. 2008a. Effects of Friendship in Transactions in An Emerging Market: Empirical Evidence From Brazil. Journal of Behavioral Finance, 5, 25–46.

Mendes-Da-Silva, Wesley, Rossoni, Luciano, Martin, Diogenes Leiva, & Martelanc, Roy.2008b. A Influência Das Redes de Relações Corporativas No Desempenho Das Empresas Do Novo Mercado Da Bovespa. Revista Brasileira de Finanças, 6, 337–358.

Mendes-Da-Silva, Wesley, & Vidal, Patrıcia. 2010. Lost in Space? The Topography of Social Relationship Network of Board Members in The Brazilian Capital Market. In In Proceedings from 10th Brazilian Finance Conference, São Paulo.

Merton, Robert K. 1996. On Social Structure and Science. Chicago: Chicago University Press.

Milgram, Stanley. 1967. The Small World Problem. Psychology Today, 2, 60–67.

Mills, C. Wright. 1956. The Power Elite. New York: Oxford.

Mizruchi, Mark S. 1996. What Do Interlocks Do? An Analysis, Critique, and Assessment of Research on Interlocking Directors. Annual Rev. of Sociology, 22, 271–298.

Moody, James. 2004. The Structure of a Social Science Collaboration Network: Disciplinary Cohesion from 1963 to 1999. American Sociological Review, 69, 213–238.

Newman, Mark E. J., Strogatz, Steven H., & Watts, Duncan J. 2001. Random Graphs with Arbitrary Degree Distributions and their Applications. Physical Rev. E, 64, 026118–1–026118–17.

Noyes, Erik Alexander. 2007. Interlocking Boards and Patterns of Corporate Entrepreneurship in the S&P500: 1996–2006. PhD Dissertation, Boston University.

Petersen, Mitchell A. 2009. Estimating Standard Errors in Finance Panel Data Sets: Comparing Approaches. Review of Financial Studies, 22, 435–480.

Pfeffer, Jeffrey, & Salancik, Gerald R. 1978. The External Control of Organizations: A Resource Dependence Perspective. New York: Harper & Row.

Pirson, Michael, & Turnbull, Shann. 2011. Toward a More Humanistic Governance Model: Network Governance Structures. Journal of Business Ethics, 99, 101–114.

Santos, Rafael L., & Silveira, Alexandre D. M. 2007. Board Interlocking No Brasil: A Participação de Conselheiros Em Múltiplas Companhias e Seu Efeito Sobre O Valor Das Empresas. Revista Brasileira de Finanças, 5, 125–163.

Schonlau, Robert, & Singh, Param V. 2009. Board Network and Merger Performance. Tepper School of Business. Paper 449. Available at: http:// repository.cmu.edu/tepper/449. Accessed on September 30, 2011.

Scott, W. Richard. 2001. Institutions and Organizations. 2 nd edn. Sage: Thousand Oaks.

Stafsudd, Anna. 2009. Corporate Networks as Informal Governance Mechanisms: A Small Worlds Approach to Sweden. Corporate Governance: An Internatioanl Review, 17, 62–76.

Subrahmanyam, Avanidhar. 2008. Social Networks and Corporate Governance. European Financial Management, 14, 633–662.

Wasserman, Stanley, & Faust, Katherine. 1994. Social Network Analysis: Methods and Applications. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Watts, Duncan J., & Strogatz, Steven H. 1998. Collective Dynamics of SmallWorld Networks. Nature, 393, 440–442.

Westlund, Hans, & Adam, Frane. 2010. Social Capital and Economic Performance: A Meta-Analysis of 65 Studies. European Planning Studies, 18, 893– 919.

Yang, Haibin, Lin, Zhiang, & Lin, Ya. 2010. A Multilevel Framework of Firm Boundaries: Firm Characteristics, Dyadic Differences, and Network Attributes. Strategic Management Journal, 31, 237–261.

Yermack, David L. 1996. Higher Evaluation of Companies with a Small Board of Directors. Journal of Financial Economics, 40, 185–211.