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Innovating, exit or both? Strategic responses to crisis revisited from resource redeployment perspective: evidence from China

Author

Listed:
  • Jun Jin
  • Shijing Li
  • Zan Chen
  • Liying Wang

Abstract

Purpose - Although scholars in strategic management have identified innovating and exit as firms’ two sequential strategic responses to long-run crisis, the potential interdependency has yet remained implicit. Specifically, in the context of Chinese Privately Owned Enterprises (POEs), this study investigates the interrelationship of these two strategic responses during long-run crisis. Building on resource redeployment perspective, the authors propose that firms tend to simultaneously leverage innovating and exit responses. Design/methodology/approach - The authors use the data from the 2010 Chinese POEs survey to verify how firms in the long-term crisis made strategic responses after the 2008 financial crisis. Besides, the authors utilize Probit regressions as the basic analysis and further employ bivariate Probit regressions to conduct robustness tests. Findings - This study provides empirical evidence confirming that firms in the long-run period of the crisis tend to adopt both exit and innovating strategies at the same time, that is, the strategy of resource redeployment. Moreover, this study further finds that government subsidies, the degree of marketization and firm’s organizational capability could all accentuate the decision-making of firms’ resource redeployment. Originality/value - The authors thus contribute to the study of strategic responses to crisis in strategic management by dynamically find out the interdependency of two responses and enrich the research on resource redeployment perspective by identifying three influential positive antecedents, adding to the ongoing investigation on positive drivers of resource redeployment.

Suggested Citation

  • Jun Jin & Shijing Li & Zan Chen & Liying Wang, 2022. "Innovating, exit or both? Strategic responses to crisis revisited from resource redeployment perspective: evidence from China," International Journal of Emerging Markets, Emerald Group Publishing Limited, vol. 19(4), pages 868-894, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:ijoemp:ijoem-05-2021-0656
    DOI: 10.1108/IJOEM-05-2021-0656
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