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Navigating the New Normal: Which firms have adapted better to the COVID-19 disruption?
The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly impacted businesses worldwide by lowering demand, impeding operations, stressing supply chains, and limiting access to finance. Yet we still lack an understanding of how firms can successfully adapt to this disruption. I examine this issue theoretically by com...
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Published in: | Technovation 2022-02, Vol.110, p.102368-102368, Article 102368 |
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Main Author: | |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | The COVID-19 pandemic has significantly impacted businesses worldwide by lowering demand, impeding operations, stressing supply chains, and limiting access to finance. Yet we still lack an understanding of how firms can successfully adapt to this disruption. I examine this issue theoretically by combining arguments around dynamic capabilities and managerial cognition and developing several hypotheses concerning firm innovation, knowledge sources, management practices, and gender issues in relation to firms’ adaptation to this crisis. I test these assertions using data from two rounds of surveys involving more than 11,000 firms from 28 countries both before and after COVID-19 was officially declared a global crisis. The empirical results provide prima facie evidence that innovators, in particular those who are younger (i.e. start-ups) and those who rely on internal sources of knowledge, are more likely to adapt to COVID-19 than non-innovators. Moreover, firms with better management practices exhibit also greater ability to adapt to the crisis. I did not find systematic gender differences upon examining firms managed by women versus men. Following these findings, I set out several implications for research and policy.
•I develop theoretical arguments to explain which firms will be more likely to adapt to the COVID-19 crisis.•I test these hypotheses using a new dataset of more than 11,000 firms across 28 countries before and after the crisis.•Innovators, particularly those relying on internal knowledge sources, are more likely to adapt successfully to COVID-19.•Start-ups and firms with better management practices are also more like to adapt to COVID-19.•I do not find any evidence in terms of adaptation success between firms with a female (versus male) manager. |
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ISSN: | 0166-4972 1879-2383 0166-4972 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.technovation.2021.102368 |