Introduction
Multinational enterprises (MNEs) face a daunting variety of general environmental risks and uncertainties (Miller, Reference Miller1992; World Economic Forum, 2021), rendering risk and uncertainty as increasingly salient topics in management (Alvarez, Afuah, & Gibson, Reference Alvarez, Afuah and Gibson2018; Bridge, Reference Bridge2021; Cavusgil, Deligonul, Ghauri, Bamiatzi, Park, & Mellahi, Reference Cavusgil, Deligonul, Ghauri, Bamiatzi, Park and Mellahi2020; Packard & Clark, Reference Packard and Clark2020; van der Vegt, Essens, Wahlström, & George, Reference van der Vegt, Essens, Wahlström and George2015). While the concept of environmental uncertainty is not new (Duncan, Reference Duncan1972; Milliken, Reference Milliken1987), some of today's macro-environmental risks and uncertainties, such as global technological and ecological disruptions (e.g., cyberattacks and climate change), pandemics (Van Assche & Lundan, Reference Van Assche and Lundan2020), and extreme regulatory uncertainty (Cuervo-Cazurra, Doz, & Gaur, Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Doz and Gaur2020), present new challenges and point to the interplay between risk, uncertainty, and organisational capabilities to manage them in international contexts (Lee & Klassen, Reference Lee and Klassen2016; Lessard & Lucea, Reference Lessard and Lucea2009).
The resource-based view (Penrose, Reference Penrose1959; Wernerfelt, Reference Wernerfelt1984) and the capability theory of the firm (Teece, Reference Teece2019) together offer a useful foundation for theorising the capabilities required to navigate risky and uncertain environments. International management (IM) researchers have theorised how MNEs manage both risk and uncertainty (Clegg, Voss, & Chen, Reference Clegg, Voss, Chen, Tulder, Verbeke and Jankowska2019; van Tulder, Verbeke, & Jankowska, Reference van Tulder, Verbeke, Jankowska, van Tulder, Verbeke and Jankowska2019). For example, previous IM studies have analysed the risk and uncertainty in relation to the process of internationalisation (Liesch, Welch, & Buckley, Reference Liesch, Welch, Buckley and Buckley2014), host markets (Song, Reference Song2013), and market entry (Müllner, Reference Müllner2016). However, risk and uncertainty management, which involves a focus on mitigation (Miller, Reference Miller1992; Packard & Clark, Reference Packard and Clark2020), has to be distinguished from risk and uncertainty management capabilities, which involve embracing risk and uncertainty as a core competence (Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo, & Lopez, Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018; Lessard & Lucea, Reference Lessard and Lucea2009).
Moreover, research has tended to focus on specific forms of risk, or domains of uncertainty (Buckley, Chen, Clegg, & Voss, Reference Buckley, Chen, Clegg and Voss2018; Figueira-de-Lemos, Johanson, & Vahlne, Reference Figueira-de-Lemos, Johanson and Vahlne2011; Fisch, Reference Fisch2008; Maitland & Sammartino, Reference Maitland and Sammartino2015; Oetzel & Miklian, Reference Oetzel and Miklian2017), rather than encompassing varied sources and forms of risk and uncertainty (Knight, Reference Knight1921) within an integrated perspective (Miller, Reference Miller1992; Packard & Clark, Reference Packard and Clark2020). Knightian risk and uncertainty can be interpreted as a risk–uncertainty continuum (Rizzo & Dold, Reference Rizzo and Dold2021). Many real-world threats are perceived by managers as mixed cases of risk and uncertainty (Vahlne, Hamberg, & Schweizer, Reference Vahlne, Hamberg and Schweizer2017). For MNEs, a variety of risks and uncertainties are experienced in their host and home countries. These are reflected in a country risk profile, a firm's profile of perceived risks and uncertainties encompassing relevant general environmental-threat types for each of its countries of operation (Cavusgil et al., Reference Cavusgil, Deligonul, Ghauri, Bamiatzi, Park and Mellahi2020; Lessard & Lucea, Reference Lessard and Lucea2009; Miller, Reference Miller1992). Regulatory uncertainty, a ‘critical non-market risk’ defined as ‘the uncertainty associated with changes in regulation or public policy’ (Kingsley, Vanden Bergh, & Bonardi, Reference Kingsley, Vanden Bergh and Bonardi2012, p. 52), is a particularly important threat category (Marcus, Aragon-Correa, & Pinkse, Reference Marcus, Aragon-Correa and Pinkse2011). Regulatory uncertainty is related to, but distinct from, the ‘regulatory environment,’ which reflects the existing laws and rules in a national environment that promote certain types of behaviours and restrict others (Kostova, Reference Kostova1999).
IM research on risk and uncertainty tends to focus on the implications for emerging-market MNEs (EMNEs), especially from institutionally turbulent contexts (Fathallah, Branzei, & Schaan, Reference Fathallah, Branzei and Schaan2018; Han, Reference Han2020). For example, Cuervo-Cazurra et al. (Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018) theorised uncertainty management capability by analysing the impact of home-country uncertainty on the internationalisation–performance relationship of EMNEs, arguing that home-country political risk and corruption drive the development of uncertainty management capability. More attention is therefore needed to integrate perspectives on risk and uncertainty management capabilities and their antecedents in MNEs from advanced economies (Vahlne, Hamberg, & Schweizer, Reference Vahlne, Hamberg and Schweizer2017).
Building on Cuervo-Cazurra et al. (Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018), Lessard and Lucea (Reference Lessard and Lucea2009) and Mudambi and Swift (Reference Mudambi and Swift2011), we define risk and uncertainty management capabilities as transferring and leveraging knowledge, competencies, and other resources that form the basis of the capabilities of a firm, to better deal with risk and uncertainty. The paper studies how risk and uncertainty management capabilities are associated with macro-environmental and organisational-level antecedents (Matysiak, Rugman, & Bausch, Reference Matysiak, Rugman and Bausch2018; Schilke, Hu, & Helfat, Reference Schilke, Hu and Helfat2018). While both levels of antecedents are implicitly recognised by capability theory, their relationship with MNE risk and uncertainty management capabilities has not been sufficiently addressed. Moreover, we recognise a distinction between organisational capabilities in the face of market pressures (stressed in Teece, Reference Teece2019), and risk and uncertainty in the face of exogenous non-market threats (Buckley, Chen, Clegg, & Voss, Reference Buckley, Chen, Clegg and Voss2020; De Beule, Elia, & Piscitello, Reference De Beule, Elia and Piscitello2014; Oh, Shin, & Oetzel, Reference Oh, Shin and Oetzel2021). We focus on the implications of the latter for how MNEs develop and transfer capabilities to manage risk and uncertainty. Considering these gaps, we ask: Which factors influence the development, and cross-border transferability, of MNE risk and uncertainty management capabilities?
To address our research question, we explored the antecedents of MNE risk and uncertainty management capabilities using an inductive approach based on thematic analysis (Gioia, Corley, & Hamilton, Reference Gioia, Corley and Hamilton2013). We drew upon a unique qualitative dataset of New Zealand-based organisations. From our analysis we extend capability theory towards risk and uncertainty management capabilities in the face of exogenous non-market threats, and identify a range of novel factors that enable and/or hinder cross-border capability transfer (Luo, Reference Luo2000), thus challenging the assumptions of Cuervo-Cazurra et al. (Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018). We contribute to IM research by explaining how international human resource management (HRM) factors (e.g., training and selection) underpin MNE capabilities to manage global uncertainty (Caligiuri, De Cieri, Minbaeva, Verbeke, & Zimmermann, Reference Caligiuri, De Cieri, Minbaeva, Verbeke and Zimmermann2020).
Review of literature
Uncertainty has been a part of IM research for some time. For example, Mascarenhas (Reference Mascarenhas1982) provided a framework for coping with uncertainty, Rivoli and Salorio (Reference Rivoli and Salorio1996) analysed foreign direct investment (FDI) under uncertainty, and Fisch (Reference Fisch2008) analysed investment in new foreign subsidiaries under a receding perception of uncertainty. More recent IM research has focused on home-country uncertainty (Luo & Bu, Reference Luo and Bu2018) and building the uncertainty management capability (Cuervo-Cazurra et al., Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018) of EMNEs. De Beule, Elia, and Piscitello (Reference De Beule, Elia and Piscitello2014) distinguished endogenous uncertainty, due to the liability of origin, from exogenous uncertainty, such as that due to environmental turbulence. However, few IM studies offer an integrated, continuum perspective on risk and uncertainty (Rizzo & Dold, Reference Rizzo and Dold2021) and a focus on how MNEs from advanced economies develop capabilities to manage risk and uncertainty (Vahlne, Hamberg, & Schweizer, Reference Vahlne, Hamberg and Schweizer2017).
Capability research has recognised uncertainty implicitly, through factors such as dynamically competitive environments (Grant, Reference Grant1996; Schilke, Reference Schilke2014). Teece (Reference Teece2019) and Petricevic and Teece (Reference Petricevic and Teece2019) recognised uncertainty more explicitly, identifying deep uncertainty due to technological change, political factors, and unforeseen economic interactions, as key elements of capability theory. Teece (Reference Teece2019) defined deep uncertainty as ‘the open set of unknown unknowns about which no forecast can be made’ (p. 5). However, the antecedents of risk and uncertainty management capabilities are understudied (Teece, Peteraf, & Leih, Reference Teece, Peteraf and Leih2016), especially in IM, where researchers have focused on specific types of capabilities such as political capability (Lawton, Rajwani, & Doh, Reference Lawton, Rajwani and Doh2013) or asset-management capability (Fainshmidt, Nair, & Mallon, Reference Fainshmidt, Nair and Mallon2017), while not studying the cross-border transferability of risk and uncertainty management capabilities sufficiently. We summarise key concepts relating to risk and uncertainty management capabilities that appear in the literature in Table 1. Figure 1 integrates them in a continuum perspective on strategic management of risk and uncertainty.
Antecedents of MNEs' risk and uncertainty management capabilities
While antecedents of risk and uncertainty management capabilities have been studied in the context of supply chains (Scholten & Fynes, Reference Scholten, Fynes, Bouchery, Corbett, Fransoo and Tan2017; Yang, Xie, Yu, & Liu, Reference Yang, Xie, Yu and Liu2020), their antecedents in the MNE are poorly understood. The IM literature recognises that country risk profile might be one of these antecedents, but cautions that commercial country risk measures are poor at predicting realised risks (Jensen & Zámborský, Reference Jensen, Zámborský, Shirodkar, Strange and McGuire2020; Oetzel, Bettis, & Zenner, Reference Oetzel, Bettis and Zenner2001). Alon and Herbert (Reference Alon and Herbert2009) have stressed the distinction between macro-risk (economic, society-related, and government-related factors) and micro-risk (home country, industry, firm, and project level). Scholars have also started to pay attention to country risk profile dimensions beyond financial and political risks and uncertainties (Aitsi-Selmi, Egawa, Sasaki, Wannous, & Murray, Reference Aitsi-Selmi, Egawa, Sasaki, Wannous and Murray2015), although the explicit link between country risk profile and MNE risk and uncertainty management capabilities is not developed sufficiently (Smith & Fischbacher, Reference Smith and Fischbacher2009).
Other country-level factors such as the regulatory environment (Lawton, Rajwani, & Doh, Reference Lawton, Rajwani and Doh2013) and country–firm interactions could also affect capabilities (Matysiak, Rugman, & Bausch, Reference Matysiak, Rugman and Bausch2018) for managing risk and uncertainty. Lastly, organisational resources such as market, technological, and political resources can affect organisational capabilities (Danneels, Reference Danneels2008; Schilke, Hu, & Helfat, Reference Schilke, Hu and Helfat2018). Studies have unveiled several mechanisms that explain how antecedents such as regulatory environment and organisational resources underpin capabilities. For example, Lawton, Rajwani, and Doh (Reference Lawton, Rajwani and Doh2013) recognised networks, structure, and HR as the mechanisms, while Fan, Li, Sun, and Cheng (Reference Fan, Li, Sun and Cheng2017) pointed to culture diffusion, team support, and strategy alignment.
Yet, research on the antecedents of MNEs' risk and uncertainty management capabilities has not sufficiently integrated insights from capability theory. IM research tends to focus on country risk and its mitigation (Cavusgil et al., Reference Cavusgil, Deligonul, Ghauri, Bamiatzi, Park and Mellahi2020), with a lack of studies on factors that influence how MNEs develop integrated capabilities for managing both risk and uncertainty. Recognising more fully the limits to mitigation of uncertainty is important (Packard & Clark, Reference Packard and Clark2020). A deeper understanding of antecedents of risk and uncertainty management capabilities can lead to a more robust theory of capabilities for managing risk and uncertainty and contribute to the debate on risk and uncertainty management strategies (Bridge, Reference Bridge2021).
Risk and uncertainty management capabilities across borders
Developing risk and uncertainty management capabilities is important for all organisations, but especially for MNEs that need to manage risk and uncertainty in multiple countries. Lessard and Lucea (Reference Lessard and Lucea2009) suggested the need to embrace risk management as a core competence, stating that ‘to the extent that a firm is able to manage certain types of risks better than its competitors, it has the potential to outperform them by exploiting such capability’ (p. 299). They highlighted the need to define the way firms think about, measure, and integrate risk into the formulation and implementation of their business strategies as key components of MNE risk management capability. We build on this insight but encompass both risk and uncertainty.
Uncertainty is becoming an increasingly salient concern for strategic managers (Teece & Leih, Reference Teece and Leih2016) and organisation scholars (Alvarez & Barney, Reference Alvarez and Barney2005). In IM research, Cuervo-Cazurra et al. (Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018) drew on organisational learning theory, the resilience literature, and the institutional perspective to argue that ‘being exposed to high uncertainty at home leads firms to learn and develop an uncertainty management capability that makes them more resilient and better at competing in different foreign markets’ (pp. 210–211). They stressed the role of organisational knowledge underpinning routines and processes that form the basis of the MNE capability to better deal with uncertainty in its interactions with the external environment.
Even so, Cuervo-Cazurra et al. (Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018) did not directly capture the capabilities for dealing with risk and uncertainty and focused specifically on political risks and uncertainties concerned with corruption. They suggested future studies could survey managers to get a sense of their ability to deal with uncertainty. Our study responds to their call for an enriched understanding of the nature of risk and uncertainty management capabilities by examining their antecedents and by thematically categorising managers' perceptions of their organisations' capabilities to manage risk and uncertainty. In our study, we analysed a broader spectrum of uncertainties and risks, including natural hazards, terrorist attacks, pandemics, and regulations. Further, we focused on MNEs from advanced economies to begin to address the gap in conceptualisations of risk and uncertainty management capabilities.
One limitation of Cuervo-Cazurra et al.'s (Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018) study is that they did not sufficiently acknowledge how uncertainty and risk may differ across countries, and thus how transferable uncertainty management capabilities (and related knowledge and competencies) are across borders (Mudambi & Swift, Reference Mudambi and Swift2011). Luo (Reference Luo2000) defined the transferability of capabilities as ‘the extent to which a parent firm is equipped with or controls distinctive capabilities that can be transferred to a foreign subunit, resulting in a competitive advantage’ (p. 367). Cuervo-Cazurra et al. (Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018) focused on leveraging the institutional disadvantages of EMNEs' home markets for internationalisation. The extension of this concept in the context of developed home countries is largely missing. In addressing this gap, we also grounded the risk and uncertainty management capabilities concept in the organisational capability literature (Arndt, Reference Arndt2019; Schilke, Hu, & Helfat, Reference Schilke, Hu and Helfat2018; Teece, Reference Teece2018). Capability theory has embraced uncertainty (Teece, Reference Teece2019), but further work is needed to better understand the antecedents and nature of risk and uncertainty management capabilities across borders.
Methodology
We followed the Gioia, Corley, and Hamilton (Reference Gioia, Corley and Hamilton2013) approach to generating rigorous and transparent inductive theorisation from qualitative research data. Grounded-theory approaches are well suited to analysing poorly understood phenomena (Glaser & Strauss, Reference Glaser and Strauss1967) and the dynamic and interactive processes that contribute to capability development. We therefore developed novel theorisation about MNE capabilities directly from the first-hand perspectives, rationales, practices, and behaviours of senior managers involved in risk and uncertainty management.
Empirical setting
We chose New Zealand as the empirical setting for our study because prior research has recognised it as a country within which a variety of risks and uncertainties are encountered (Canlas, Reference Canlas2018; van der Vegt et al., Reference van der Vegt, Essens, Wahlström and George2015). For example, Stevenson et al. (Reference Stevenson, Chang-Richards, Conradson, Wilkinson, Vargo, Seville and Brunsdon2014) found that strong organisational networks aided business recovery after the 2010–11 New Zealand earthquakes. Tisch and Galbreath (Reference Tisch and Galbreath2018) stressed the role of social relationships and community in organisational responses to extreme-weather events and climate change in New Zealand. New Zealand also has relatively stringent regulations (Ameer & Othman, Reference Ameer and Othman2020; Hernandez, Reference Hernandez2018).
Sampling strategy
Consistent with Gioia, Corley, and Hamilton (Reference Gioia, Corley and Hamilton2013), we used theoretical sampling to develop a new theory that is systematically grounded in our qualitative data (Glaser & Strauss, Reference Glaser and Strauss1967; Strauss & Corbin, Reference Strauss and Corbin1998). Theoretical sampling does not use a rigidly predetermined set of sampling criteria and instead is ‘carried out so that emerging theoretical considerations guide the selection of case and/or participants’ (Bell, Bryman, & Harley, Reference Bell, Bryman and Harley2018, p. 719). It is a form of analytic induction which typically begins with a general research question and an open-minded approach to who or what might be relevant to a study and involves refining theoretical ideas through a process of constant comparison (Charmaz, Reference Charmaz and Emerson1983; Glaser & Strauss, Reference Glaser and Strauss1967). Theoretical sampling is therefore appropriate when a study aims ‘to discover categories and their properties and to suggest the interrelationships into a theory’ (Glaser & Strauss, Reference Glaser and Strauss1967, p. 62).
Following our theoretical sampling logic, Phase 1 of the study resulted in a purposefully diverse range of New Zealand-based organisations across three broad categories – MNE, domestic business, and public organisation. The aim in selecting our initial sample was to ‘obtain both retrospective and real-time accounts by those people experiencing the phenomenon of theoretical interest’ (Gioia, Corley, & Hamilton, Reference Gioia, Corley and Hamilton2013, p. 19). This approach allowed for an open-minded and yet theoretically sensitive examination of the potential relationships between environmental factors, organisational factors, and risk and uncertainty management capabilities. It also allowed us to situate the MNEs in their social and economic context and acted as a point of comparison in our theory building (Charmaz, Reference Charmaz and Emerson1983). This approach was consistent with the definition of MNEs as ‘networked firms whose subsidiaries act as nodes embedded in a variety of local contexts’ (Mudambi & Swift, Reference Mudambi and Swift2011, p. 186). In Phase 2, we refined our theoretical ideas through group interviews. Finally, in Phase 3, we tested our ‘emerging theoretical ideas’ (Bell, Bryman, & Harley, Reference Bell, Bryman and Harley2018, p. 442) through interviews with senior managers from MNEs. Our sample is summarised in Table 2.
The total sample included 34 participants, three of whom participated in both the focus group and the individual interviews. Fifteen of these participants were from MNEs, including six participants who gave in-depth interviews. Each informant held a senior position, directly responsible for managing risk and uncertainty. In total, 33 organisations were included in the sample, including four organisations from which two or more informants were interviewed. MNEs were defined by revenue streams spanning two or more countries and included both the service and manufacturing sectors. Five organisations in our sample were MNEs. MNE 1 was headquartered in New Zealand and MNEs 2–5 were New Zealand subsidiaries of foreign MNEs. Table 3 provides information about the MNEs, including their geographic reach, revenues and risk/uncertainty management practices.
Source. Company websites and interviews conducted for this study.
Three-phase research design
A three-phase research design was used to collect data that moved from a ‘zoomed-out’ view of risk and uncertainty management in New Zealand to a ‘zoomed-in’ view of how specific organisations developed capabilities for responding to risk and uncertainties faced in their environments globally (Nicolini, Reference Nicolini2012). To support this aim, we developed a three-stage research process (Figure 2) involving exploratory data collection through focus groups, theoretical refinement through group interviews, and testing of theoretical ideas through individual interviews. Data analysis was iterative, occurring after each phase of the research. It was completed when new codes were no longer emerging from the data and theoretical saturation had been achieved (Bell, Bryman, & Harley, Reference Bell, Bryman and Harley2018).
Focus groups
In Phase 1, semi-structured focus groups were conducted with 20 senior managers in the private sector (65%, including nine MNE participants) and the public sector (35%). Focus groups were selected for this phase of the study, due to their capacity to generate data and insights about a nascent topic that would be inaccessible without group interaction (Morgan, Reference Morgan1997). This approach allows for ‘respondent triangulation,’ whereby ‘the inferences drawn from a set of data sources will be checked by collecting data from others’ (Hill & McGowan, Reference Hill and McGowan1999, p. 15). To enable detailed discussion, informants were divided into four groups (with at least one participant from an MNE). Each group was allocated a facilitator who, over 1.5–2 hours, guided the informants through theoretically informed questions. Although a semi-structured schedule was used, time was allowed for informants to engage with each other (Morgan, Reference Morgan1997), which in turn generated unexpected themes.
Group interviews
In Phase 2, group interviews were conducted with eight informants who were evenly sourced from the public and private sectors (including two MNE participants). A semi-structured schedule was developed from Phase 2 coding, which allowed for further investigation of established concepts (e.g., uncertainty and organisational capabilities) and emergent themes (e.g., MNEs' risk and uncertainty management capabilities and their antecedents and transferability). Informants were randomly allocated to one of three facilitated groups, to undertake a semi-structured group interview lasting 1.5 hours. Audio recordings were professionally transcribed and analysed in NVivo. This phase of the study offered further confirmation of the impact of both country context and organisational factors on MNE risk and uncertainty management capabilities.
Individual interviews
In Phase 3, interviews were conducted with nine informants from MNEs (67%) and domestic organisations (33%). Three of the interviewees had previously participated in the focus groups. These interviews were specifically for testing our emerging theoretical ideas. Accordingly, a semi-structured-interview schedule was developed for the individual interviews, which focused on the relationship between (a) risk and uncertainty management capabilities and their cross-border transferability, and (b) antecedents of risk and uncertainty management capabilities. All interviewed organisations were located in Auckland, New Zealand, selected to maximise revelatory potential, the richness of data and trustworthiness (Langley & Abdallah, Reference Langley, Abdallah, Bergh and Ketchen2011). Each interview lasted approximately 60 minutes and was audio-recorded.
Data analysis
Our analytical approach followed Gioia, Corley, and Hamilton (Reference Gioia, Corley and Hamilton2013) and involved a general inductive strategy (Glaser & Strauss, Reference Glaser and Strauss1967). Gioia, Corley, and Hamilton (Reference Gioia, Corley and Hamilton2013) approach to demonstrating rigour in the qualitative analysis includes identifying first-order concepts from respondent quotes, classifying second-order themes that group together in vivo codes on the basis of the theoretical tendencies within the data, and generating aggregate dimensions that represent theoretical themes. Our underlying data structure is presented in Figure 3.
To identify first-order concepts, data were initially explored by asking probing questions of the complete dataset, which enabled the authors to identify core thematic categories that would help to link the responses shared by the informants (Glaser & Strauss, Reference Glaser and Strauss1967) to the concepts under investigation. Data were coded by multiple research-team members to ensure inter-rater reliability, and to guard against new discoveries being missed. To achieve parsimony, the first-order concepts were checked and, where appropriate, combined (Patton, Reference Patton2002).
Next, we used axial coding principles (Strauss & Corbin, Reference Strauss and Corbin1998) to relate first-order concepts to reveal central (i.e., axis) phenomena in our data, identifying a set of second-order themes. Finally, we combined the second-order themes into aggregate dimensions that represented our dataset. By using these processes, we were able to ‘develop a framework of the underlying structure of experiences and processes that are evident in the raw data’ (Thomas, Reference Thomas2006, p. 238). This allowed us to identify the antecedents of risk and uncertainty management capabilities from our theoretical sample, and to analyse the factors involved in the cross-border transfer. Representative quotes that support our data structure are provided in Tables 4 and 5.
Findings
Our data structure presents two final aggregate dimensions: country-level antecedents and cross-border capabilities. Prior to describing the detailed themes identified from our analysis, we highlight three overarching observations. First, we found evidence from all three phases of data collection to suggest that antecedents of MNE risk and uncertainty management capabilities involved a combination of macro-environmental factors and organisational-level factors. Second, we found evidence that country-level embeddedness (in social and economic context) was important because it appeared to form a link between the MNE (particularly when New Zealand was the host country) and its understanding of the fit between macro-environmental (country risk profile and regulatory environment) and organisational-level antecedents (knowledge and network resources). For example, country-level embeddedness enabled MNEs to access external network resources (resources embedded in the firm's external networks) from public and domestic organisations. This is important because our theorisation of MNE capability development emphasises the links between the final dimensions in our data structure. We recognised that risk and uncertainty management capabilities developed in one country may be transferred to and leveraged in other host-country settings despite the likely national differences in risks, uncertainties, and institutions. Below, we explain our findings to demonstrate how we drew upon first-order concepts and second-order themes to identify the two aggregate dimensions in our data structure.
Country-level antecedents of MNEs' risk and uncertainty management capabilities
Country risk profile defined by types of threat
Our data revealed the importance of understanding the country risk profile. Respondents often characterised risks at a national level and this was the basis for risk and uncertainty management capability development for MNEs. Each country had a unique risk profile and an MNE's home-country risk profile was likely to affect its risk and uncertainty management capabilities. New Zealand-based MNE 1's capabilities, for example, were affected by the distinct risk environment in New Zealand, with relatively low risk related to corruption, kidnapping, and terrorism. However, New Zealand's risk profile was skewed towards earthquake and other natural disasters (Table 6), potentially giving the country's MNEs stronger capabilities in managing these types of risks and uncertainties abroad.
Note. We define the country risk profile as ‘a firm's profile of risks and uncertainties encompassing relevant general environmental-threat types for each of its countries of operation.’ The categories and sub-categories of the general environmental threats build on Cavusgil et al. (Reference Cavusgil, Deligonul, Ghauri, Bamiatzi, Park and Mellahi2020), Miller (Reference Miller1992), Lessard and Lucea (Reference Lessard and Lucea2009), Oetzel and Oh (Reference Oetzel, Oh, Lawton and Rajwani2015) and World Economic Forum (2021). Column 3 (sub-categories of threats in New Zealand) is based on risks and uncertainties prioritised in organisations in this study (frequency of responses from our 34 participants/informants). Column 4 shows examples of specific types of threats.
Focus group participants were asked to categorise risks and uncertainties they perceived as important, and then discuss how they had arrived at their conclusions. The top two bullet points in the data structure (Figure 3) showed that the perceived risk type was commonly used to generalise about the types of threat:
We create a profile for that country and then you have country-specific tools in place to avoid or to hedge that risk … for high-risk countries like you have in Latin America … you have the strategy that you say maybe you need a security manager … in our office, we don't have a security manager because we don't see the need really. (MNE Respondent 2)
Though it was evident that a country's risk profile is shaped by past extreme events, these were not always good predictors of future extreme events. For example, while 10 of our 34 informants mentioned pandemic disease as a possible risk (Table 6), their organisations did not seem to take this seriously. Respondents held the general perception that New Zealand was a low-risk country with low uncertainty, despite the probabilistic evidence that the country will be subject to volcanic activity and earthquakes. This finding was consistent with the conservative attitude towards uncertainty presented in other studies (e.g., Minkov and Hofstede, Reference Minkov and Hofstede2014), as MNE Respondent 3 noted: ‘A very conservative culture will dictate a more conservative approach to risk, and that conservative approach to risk will have related conservative strategies.’ The 2019 terrorist attack at mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, was a further demonstration of uncertainty in preparing for extreme events – terrorist attacks were among the less likely types of risks identified in our 2018 dataset (Table 6).
Crucially, we found that there were links between the country risk profile and how risks and uncertainties were managed, as MNE Respondent 3 noted: ‘I think if you were considering a country where natural disasters were not as prominent as they are in our environment, they would deal with it differently.’ In turn, a subsidiary's approach to developing risk and uncertainty management capabilities seemed to be driven by the host-country risk profile. For example, MNE Respondent 2 commented on this issue: ‘Do we train for a terrorist attack or a bomb threat in New Zealand, do we need it? The packages are here but it's our decision to customise it for the local market.’
Additionally, MNE capability development appeared to be embedded in networks of local organisations (e.g., associations for risk professionals in New Zealand, city council and disaster management agencies). Government support for capability development was indirect. Public organisations seemed to provide more information related to deep uncertainty, longer time horizons and concomitant response scenarios. MNEs used this information and their own environmental scanning to engage in scenario planning, as this quote acknowledged:
What became very evident was that our big chunky risks impacted many parts of the business, and we weren't taking them in that manner … it really drove home that we just do one thing better and just collaborate around doing better scenario planning, let's say around these types of risks, we would make a significant impact in the business. (MNE Respondent 1a)
The country-level determinants of risk and uncertainty management capabilities not only included the type of threat (e.g., earthquake responses are different to extreme-weather responses), but were tempered by the variety of perceptions of risk and uncertainty (Lee & Klassen, Reference Lee and Klassen2016). For instance, MNE Respondent 1b stated: ‘New Zealand is great at planning for earthquakes, they plan till their hearts’ content. Throw anything outside of an earthquake, then they suddenly go it's in the too-hard basket.’ The ‘too-hard basket’ metaphor shows that that disaster responses and preparedness vary according to both the perceived and actual danger. Hence, our findings confirm that perceptions of risk and uncertainty can be different from reality (Duncan, Reference Duncan1972).
Regulatory environment linked to risk and uncertainty
Our data showed the importance of understanding the impact of the regulatory environment on risk and uncertainty management capabilities. For example, the following respondent noted:
But we in New Zealand have an uncertain regulatory environment [in] which to compete. And so that business is locally focused because New Zealand is identified as among Canada and Australia and the UK, as leading regulation environment. What happens in those four countries will work across the world. And so that's why the focus is on regulatory risk … in those markets. And then we build the capability team around that. (MNE Respondent 4)
While most participants used the language of ‘risk’ (many were ‘risk managers’), ‘uncertainty’ was mentioned by MNE participants many times, often with respect to the regulatory and legislative environments. For example:
We have a lot of uncertainty especially for us … our current example of a disaster was earlier this year when we were charged with contravening [the] … Act by the government… If you consider something like a natural disaster, the difference would be that it's not unexpected but it's a daily challenge to deal with … it means that you're trying to manage something that's not unexpected but it's still uncertain. (MNE Respondent 4)
The quote above shows that uncertainty is conceptually different from unexpected threats, a distinction related to what Packard and Clark (Reference Packard and Clark2020) called unknown (epistemic) uncertainty and unknowable (aleatory) uncertainty. This corresponds with the following statement from MNE Respondent 1b: ‘I'm not 100% sold on the all-hazards approach that Australia takes, there is something to learn from that, because even though they do all hazards, their plan can transcend different events.’ To respond to the risks and uncertainties, MNEs employed predictive strategies such as hedging and insuring, and nonpredictive strategies such as scenario planning that were coordinated with disaster response services. However, there were legacy changes to regulations and privatisation unique to each country. The extent to which risk and uncertainty management capabilities were coordinated by a joint MNE-industry/public effort was found to vary, as national laws and behavioural norms reflect institutions (Kostova & Hult, Reference Kostova and Hult2016). MNE Respondent 4 commented on this issue: ‘We have clients across many sectors, including property, dealing with the likes of Civil Defence, dealing with the New Zealand Defence Force. So, all those contact points would have been areas to learn from and to bring back.’
Finally, regulatory threats to MNEs need to be considered in terms of their relative impact, such as their weighting in the portfolio and their exposure for each country. MNE Respondent 2 highlighted this point in relation to their diversification and hedging strategy:
Right now, we have an economic crisis in Turkey, but in Turkey we have maybe 50 stores. In the big scheme of our store portfolio, it doesn't really have a big impact. But then you have other threats like import taxes in the US … it's a very big market, in North America we have 500 stores. If there's an import tax from China to the US it has quite a big impact.
In summary, the aggregate dimension ‘Country-level antecedents of risk and uncertainty management capabilities’ shows that while the country risk profile objectively rests on historical events, MNE capability development is tempered by a managerial perception that is underpinned by national culture, and embedded in a network of a country's domestic/public organisations and in the regulatory environment. In the next section, we present the organisational-level antecedents of risk and uncertainty management capabilities and their cross-border transferability.
Cross-border risk and uncertainty management capabilities
Organisational resources enabling MNEs' risk and uncertainty management capabilities
Organisational resources that enable risk and uncertainty management capabilities are related to a more general attribute of MNEs: they inherently seek the cross-border benefits of competencies and knowledge (Mudambi & Swift, Reference Mudambi and Swift2011). MNE Respondent 5 noted the following, regarding the desire to leverage knowledge, competencies, and approaches to managing risk and uncertainty globally:
We perform similar functions but they [HQ] just do it on a larger scale. So, we would sometimes potentially leverage off what risk profile, for example, and their retail banking space would look like. And run through it and say it will also apply here. Most of the time it does depending on the functions being the same. We also adopt the framework for how we profile risk as a group policy.
In terms of the influence of a parent company on subsidiary risk and uncertainty management practices, MNE Respondent 5 stated: ‘Things like natural disasters … we will obviously have a bigger focus on earthquakes in New Zealand. Whereas some of Australia … would have a bigger focus on disasters such as fires and floods. But in terms of actual operational risks, that probably doesn't actually differ.’ MNE Respondent 1c made a point about the efforts to learn and share, across networks and borders, knowledge and competencies related to uncertainty and risk management: ‘We get the benefit of that kind of fact base and experience, learning from actually going through particular events in other nations that can be shared across.’ The point was reinforced by MNE Respondent 1b, in a comment related to multinational (network) structure: ‘Their heightened security has relevance to us … because that makes us bring in these controls that we wouldn't necessarily consider without knowing that. And that all comes from that intelligence sharing.’
The risk management policy of a group can also be more stringent than in the host country; this presents a challenge as to whether to apply the stricter group standards: ‘Sometimes a policy is good enough for New Zealand but not good enough for our company,’ stated MNE Respondent 2. Several respondents noted that Australia has developed risk management capabilities further than New Zealand, using more advanced probabilistic tools and national risk registers. Respondents mentioned that while the differences between country risk profiles are important, the risk management tools are often broad enough to be applied across countries that are not too different (e.g., New Zealand and Australia). However, in culturally different countries, where MNEs often operate due to their global value chains, caution is needed: ‘Because one of the things there was particularly around bribes and corruption. And in South America of course you can't get anything done without a bribe it would seem. Certainly, we don't engage in bribery, but it does your head in working in South America,’ stated MNE Respondent 1a.
Furthermore, participants stressed the role of network resources in managing uncertainty. MNE Participant 1a mentioned the role of the Risk Management Society's local (New Zealand) and global conferences for accessing knowledge and resources from other organisations. MNE Participant 3 further commented about the importance of maintaining networks to catalyse cooperation in times of crises: ‘You would have put controls in place such as offsite data, backup, and such like; who you would rely on if something was to happen today; who do we call, where do we call, what networks do we have in place?’ Local networks were also stressed by public and domestic organisations. For example, Domestic Respondent 1 stated: ‘You suddenly find yourself confronted with something, there's uncertainty. Your staff aren't trained and you don't have any networks to support you. You're in no-man's land before you start. So having networks will help.’
In summary, risk and uncertainty management capabilities can be extended through cross-border leveraging of not only competencies (Lessard & Lucea, Reference Lessard and Lucea2009), but also of knowledge (Mudambi & Swift, Reference Mudambi and Swift2011) and network resources (Gulati, Reference Gulati1999; Lai, Lin, & Leung, Reference Lai, Lin and Leung1998; Lavie, Reference Lavie2006). Knowledge about risk and uncertainty and related information collection and processing capabilities were stressed by Packard and Clark (Reference Packard and Clark2020) as key ingredients of a dynamic approach to the judgement of decision logics in the face of multiple risks and uncertainties. Moreover, our findings suggest that both internal and external networks (Meyer, Mudambi, & Narula, Reference Meyer, Mudambi and Narula2011) may be required for developing and leveraging capabilities to manage different types of threats. This is consistent with the suggestions of Schilke, Hu, and Helfat (Reference Schilke, Hu and Helfat2018) that we need to know more about how different types of networks may shape organisational capabilities.
Transferability of MNEs' risk and uncertainty management capabilities
The transferability of cross-border risk and uncertainty management capabilities can be limited because the types of disasters are coupled with each country (Oh & Oetzel, Reference Oh and Oetzel2011), and with the institutions in each country (Kostova, Reference Kostova1999). On the other hand, the transferability of risk and uncertainty management capabilities was identifiable as a trend among the MNEs, revealing their desire to disseminate knowledge and competencies to subsidiaries. MNE Respondent 3 commented in this respect: ‘So, whether I was sitting here or whether I was in Mumbai or whether I was in London, if I had to go through the risk training and the conduct training it would have the same look and feel. That's the intention.’
This point was reinforced by MNE Respondent 2, an expatriate subsidiary manager reassigned to New Zealand from Mexico, who noted that ‘old routines’ from the MNE's previous operations are recombined with ‘new routines’ developed for risk management in a newly entered market, and then they continue to be reconfigured: ‘You learn and then you adjust your routines.’ He noted that knowledge and competencies about markets with similar risks and uncertainties were transferred and leveraged to improve risk management practices: ‘We had a couple of incidents when we opened in Mexico, just the corruption for example. You take the learnings and the mistakes we made as a company, when we opened in Colombia.’ On the other hand, MNE Respondent 1a noted the importance of considering cross-cultural differences and their influence on transferability of capabilities:
Somewhere like China it is a bit culturally different. I know that when we rolled out our code of conduct, I actually made a point, it was at the request of the country manager who was from head office there. We went up and met with them in Shanghai and in Hong Kong to talk them through the code of conduct.'
MNE Respondent 1b suggested that the transferability of risk and uncertainty management capabilities is also influenced by the national similarities/differences in the regulatory environment: ‘We've tried to develop one approach that sort of meets the gold standard I guess, which is the European Union. While also perhaps in jurisdictions where there might be some random outliers, [we are] dealing with those on an expert basis.’ The dissemination of knowledge regarding risk and uncertainty across borders hinges on the skills and experience of the managers who seek to cooperate and learn from their counterparts in other subsidiaries or relevant partnerships. The assessment of the relevance of risk and uncertainty management capabilities was continuously scrutinised to recognise both transfer barriers and discern opportunities for capability transfer, with the help of training:
If we're concerned around any terrorism threats … or pandemics, we may get that information and then bring it internally and then use it to package our training … And quite often it's rolled out globally. (MNE Respondent 3)
MNE Respondent 5 also commented on the importance of training for implementing risk management know-how and communicating best practices: ‘Through training, communication, that's how we build that culture of risk and try to embed it into a position.’ Furthermore, risk management experts can be imported from diverse locations, resulting in a modified configuration of MNE internal network members' socio-economic profiles. This can both facilitate the capability transfer (e.g., expatriates being better able to discern opportunities for transfer) and hinder it (if the expats are not trained to understand or are not embedded in the local context). As MNE Respondent 1b stated: ‘A lot of the experience that we've brought in the risk has been brought from overseas. That could have an impact as well.’
To conclude this section, we address links between the two aggregate dimensions. Risk and uncertainty management capabilities are unique to an MNE's international context yet embedded at the country level (in national culture, public–private coordination and external networks). Knowledge about risk and uncertainty is acquired by MNEs within a local network of public employees, consultants, and risk managers. This is consistent with the factors that influence risk and uncertainty management capabilities and their cross-border transferability (Luo, Reference Luo2000) and limits to transferability (Carney, Dieleman, & Taussig, Reference Carney, Dieleman and Taussig2016), suggesting that country-level embeddedness can influence capability transfer (Kostova, Reference Kostova1999). Importantly, this means that the development of capabilities and their cross-border transfer are likely to be also impacted by organisational-level factors (Schilke, Hu, & Helfat, Reference Schilke, Hu and Helfat2018), including knowledge about risk and uncertainty and both internal and external network resources (Gölgeci, Ferraris, Arslan, & Tarba, Reference Gölgeci, Ferraris, Arslan and Tarba2019; Scott-Kennel & Saittakari, Reference Scott-Kennel and Saittakari2020). We discuss these theoretical implications in the next section.
Discussion and conclusions
We discuss the theoretical implications of our research by introducing an inductive model of MNE risk and uncertainty management capabilities, their antecedents, and the factors that influence their transferability (Figure 4). We depart from Cuervo-Cazurra et al. (Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018) by expanding the antecedents that may shape both risk and uncertainty management capabilities (Lessard & Lucea, Reference Lessard and Lucea2009), and their cross-border transferability (Luo, Reference Luo2000). Though Teece (Reference Teece2019) discussed Knightian ‘true uncertainty’ (Knight, Reference Knight1921) and Rosenbergian technological uncertainty (Rosenberg, Reference Rosenberg1976) in relation to capability theory, we present a broader understanding of uncertainty, which includes potentially interconnected threats beyond market-related technological change, political factors, and unforeseen economic interactions (Hynes, Trump, Kirman, Latini, & Linkov, Reference Hynes, Trump, Kirman, Latini, Linkov, Linkov, Keenan and Trump2021). These are the traditional threats analysed in IM, and they have continued and evolving relevance (Cuervo-Cazurra, Doz, & Gaur, Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Doz and Gaur2020). However, other sources of uncertainty and risk, such as climate change (Wohlgezogen, McCabe, Osegowitsch, & Mol, Reference Wohlgezogen, McCabe, Osegowitsch and Mol2020), pandemics (Van Assche & Lundan, Reference Van Assche and Lundan2020) and non-market technological threats (Oh, Shin, & Oetzel, Reference Oh, Shin and Oetzel2021), are increasingly recognised and have been neglected in capability theory and its application to MNEs (Matysiak, Rugman, & Bausch, Reference Matysiak, Rugman and Bausch2018).
We conceptualise MNE risk and uncertainty management capabilities as transferring and leveraging knowledge, competencies, and network resources across borders. The concept of resource leveraging (coordinating and deploying resources to create value) builds on Sirmon, Hitt, Ireland, and Gilbert (Reference Sirmon, Hitt, Ireland and Gilbert2011) and Carnes, Hitt, Sirmon, Chirico, and Huh (Reference Carnes, Hitt, Sirmon, Chirico and Huh2021). The distinction between leveraging knowledge (Gooderham, Reference Gooderham2007) and competencies across borders builds on Mudambi and Swift (Reference Mudambi and Swift2011). They suggested that knowledge is distinct from competencies, and can help to create them and develop capabilities, such as those for managing uncertainty (Packard & Clark, Reference Packard and Clark2020). We extend Mudambi and Swift (Reference Mudambi and Swift2011) by distinguishing leveraging knowledge (scanning for information about relevant threats and implementing know-how/intellectual property) and leveraging competencies (communicating routines/practices and reconfiguring routines) from leveraging network resources that firms derive from their embeddedness in networks (Gulati, Reference Gulati1999; Lai, Lin, & Leung, Reference Lai, Lin and Leung1998; Lavie, Reference Lavie2006). Leveraging network resources across borders involves accessing local and global network resources and maintaining networks to catalyse cooperation. Transferring capabilities across borders involves recognising transfer barriers and discerning opportunities for capability transfer (Lessard, Lucea, & Vives, Reference Lessard, Lucea and Vives2013), both of which can be enhanced through HRM, including training (Park, Reference Park2011; Zhao, Anand, & Mitchell, Reference Zhao, Anand and Mitchell2005) and selection (Osman-Gani, Reference Osman-Gani1999).
Our study considers a country risk profile, including general environmental uncertainties (Miller, Reference Miller1992), and links this theoretically to the literature on capabilities for managing risk and uncertainty (Fredrich, Bouncken, & Gudergan, Reference Fredrich, Bouncken and Gudergan2022; Irwin, Drnevich, Gilstrap, & Sunny, Reference Irwin, Drnevich, Gilstrap and Sunny2022; Teece, Peteraf, & Leih, Reference Teece, Peteraf and Leih2016). We argue that there are three inter-related sets of antecedents that influence the development of risk and uncertainty management capabilities. At the macro-environmental scale, we find that the country risk profile and the regulatory environment influence how MNEs develop risk and uncertainty management capabilities. We find that defined threats that are perceived as likely to occur based on prior experience (e.g., earthquake risk) are combined with contextual factors such as national culture. These factors together influence how MNEs transfer and leverage knowledge, competencies, and network resources towards risk and uncertainty management capabilities.
Additionally, we identify that the regulatory environment and public–private coordination frame the interpretation of country risk profile by indirectly influencing MNE risk attitudes and behaviours related to expected and unexpected threats. It is important to distinguish between regulatory environment (Kostova, Reference Kostova1999), country risk profile and regulatory uncertainty (Kingsley, Vanden Bergh, & Bonardi, Reference Kingsley, Vanden Bergh and Bonardi2012), which may require different management strategies – such as shaping strategies – from other threats such as natural hazards (Rindova & Courtney, Reference Rindova and Courtney2020; Tashman & Rivera, Reference Tashman and Rivera2016).
We also identify organisational-level factors that influence the development of risk and uncertainty management capabilities. These factors relate to knowledge about risk and uncertainty (Vahlne, Hamberg, & Schweizer, Reference Vahlne, Hamberg and Schweizer2017) and to internal and external network resources (Gölgeci et al., Reference Gölgeci, Ferraris, Arslan and Tarba2019; Meyer, Mudambi, & Narula, Reference Meyer, Mudambi and Narula2011) to respond to risk and uncertainty. We build on Kraatz and Zajac (Reference Kraatz and Zajac2001) who emphasise that organisational resources (including knowledge and network resources in our conceptualisation) underlie competencies and are distinct from them. Together, the three antecedents (country risk profile, regulatory environment, and organisational resources) suggest an alternative to how MNEs from advanced economies develop risk and uncertainty management capabilities (compared to EMNEs). For example, they point to the potential to systematically embrace advancing regulation through proactive corporate strategy (Fremeth & Richter, Reference Fremeth and Richter2011; Sakhel, Reference Sakhel2017), as opposed to the suggestion to embrace poor institutional quality in emerging markets by developing a capability to manage and leverage it in similar markets (Cuervo-Cazurra & Genc, Reference Cuervo-Cazurra and Genc2008).
It is also important to consider how the cross-border transferability of capabilities is driven by country- and organisation-level factors and their interplay (Matysiak, Rugman, & Bausch, Reference Matysiak, Rugman and Bausch2018). While Luo (Reference Luo2000) acknowledged that some capabilities will be more difficult to transfer than others (e.g., organisational capabilities are less transferable than technological capabilities), and Carney, Dieleman, and Taussig (Reference Carney, Dieleman and Taussig2016) pointed to the limits of the transferability of institutional capabilities, they did not explore the transferability of risk and uncertainty management capabilities. Overall, our study goes beyond the traditional emphasis in IM regarding capabilities for managing political risk and corruption (Cuervo-Cazurra et al., Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018) or political uncertainty (Henisz, Reference Henisz2016). Instead, it explores a broader array of antecedents of capabilities for thriving amid global uncertainty (Zámborský, Reference Zámborský2021).
This paper makes several contributions. First, we contribute to the research on antecedents of capabilities by extending the environmental and organisational factors conceptualised by Schilke, Hu, and Helfat (Reference Schilke, Hu and Helfat2018) towards risk and uncertainty management in MNEs. This study finds that MNE risk and uncertainty management capabilities are driven by country-level factors, including country risk profile and regulatory environment, and organisational resources. Second, our analysis reveals new insights into the concept of risk and uncertainty management capabilities by identifying their elements (transferring and leveraging knowledge, competencies, and network resources across borders) and organisational enablers (knowledge about risk and uncertainty, internal and external network resources). While leveraging knowledge and competencies across borders (Mudambi & Swift, Reference Mudambi and Swift2011) is recognised as an element of risk management capabilities (Lessard & Lucea, Reference Lessard and Lucea2009), extant research has not stressed the importance of network resources as an antecedent of risk and uncertainty management capabilities.
Third, we clarify why and how the cross-border transferability of risk and uncertainty management capabilities may be limited due to environmental and organisational/relational factors (Kostova, Reference Kostova1999). We extend the theorisation of capability transfer by Luo (Reference Luo2000) and Carney, Dieleman, and Taussig (Reference Carney, Dieleman and Taussig2016) towards risk and uncertainty management, suggesting limits to cross-border transferability not fully recognised by Lessard and Lucea (Reference Lessard and Lucea2009) and Cuervo-Cazurra et al. (Reference Cuervo-Cazurra, Ciravegna, Melgarejo and Lopez2018). Specifically, we find that national differences in country risk profile, regulatory environment, and local embeddedness of the MNE–host country relationship in external networks influence the transferability of risk and uncertainty management capabilities.
Overall, we expand conceptualisations of risk and uncertainty management capabilities from the traditional to non-market sources of risk and uncertainty (Oetzel & Oh, Reference Oetzel, Oh, Lawton and Rajwani2015). In so doing, we have contributed to extending capability theory from a dominant concern with markets (Teece, Reference Teece2019) and industry dynamism (Schilke, Reference Schilke2014; Shi & Wu, Reference Shi and Wu2011), to embrace general environmental uncertainty (Miller, Reference Miller1992) and its varied nature and ‘mitigability’ (Packard & Clark, Reference Packard and Clark2020). While recognising, assessing, and addressing threats, including uncertainty, are acknowledged in capability theory in international contexts (Matysiak, Rugman, & Bausch, Reference Matysiak, Rugman and Bausch2018; Petricevic & Teece, Reference Petricevic and Teece2019), we extend the capability research in IM by conceptualising the elements and antecedents of MNEs' risk and uncertainty management capabilities and identifying factors that influence their cross-border transferability.
Finally, our study provides three managerial takeaways. First, we suggest that if managers recognise all types of risk and uncertainty, they can legitimately engage in scenario planning, as a complement to risk management. Second, risk managers should view their role as strategic (as contributors to value-creating capabilities), rather than just contingency planning. Third, managers should promote the cross-border transfer of risk and uncertainty management capabilities. Organisations need to develop capabilities to recover quickly from both local and global crises, by cooperating with local stakeholders to become flexible and adaptive to uncertain contexts (Sullivan-Taylor & Branicki, Reference Sullivan-Taylor and Branicki2011).
This study has some limitations. In common with other qualitative research on risk management (e.g., Sullivan-Taylor& Wilson, Reference Sullivan-Taylor and Wilson2009), it is based on a relatively small sample of organisations in one country. The size and the composition of the sample therefore limits the statistical generalisability of the findings. However, the theoretical sampling strategy used was aimed at the inductive theorisation of under-developed conceptual relationships that are not yet easily amenable to quantitative enquiry.
We see several avenues for future research regarding risk and uncertainty management capabilities. Further research with methods such as qualitative comparative analysis could study how antecedents interact and influence the risk and uncertainty management capabilities through various configurations. Further survey research measuring the construct of risk and uncertainty management capabilities could improve our understanding of this concept, for example with respect to reconciling routine reconfiguration between headquarters and subsidiaries (Riviere, Bass, & Andersson, Reference Riviere, Bass and Andersson2020) or knowledge management practices (Xiong, Yan, Su, Bonanni, & Li, Reference Xiong, Yan, Su, Bonanni and Li2021). In closing, we encourage more interaction between organisational capability and IM scholars (Elsahn & Benson-Rea, Reference Elsahn and Benson-Rea2018; Ingršt & Zámborský, Reference Ingršt and Zámborský2021).
Data
Not applicable (interview and focus group recordings are confidential).
Code availability
Not applicable (NVivo transcriptions are confidential).
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank Peter MacClure, Paul Gutierrez Quiroga, and David Thompson for their excellent research assistance. We would also like to thank Hilary van Uden for language editing.
Financial support
University of Auckland Business School Graduate School of Management & QuakeCoRE Grant no. 18205
Conflict of interest
Not applicable.
Peter Zámborský is a senior lecturer in the Department of Management and International Business at the University of Auckland, New Zealand, and an editorial review board member of the International Journal of Emerging Markets. Peter's research focuses on international business and strategy, including knowledge spillovers, foreign market entry modes and global innovation strategy. He has published in journals including Journal of Management & Organization, Journal of Business Strategy, and Global Economy Journal.
Bridgette Sullivan-Taylor is a senior lecturer in the Department of Management and International Business at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. Bridgette's research focuses on strategic management and international business, and particularly risk management. She has published in journals including Organisation Studies, Critical Perspectives on International Business, and International Journal of Production Research.
Daniel Tisch is a lecturer in the Department of Management and International Business at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. Daniel's research focuses on strategic management and organisation studies, and particularly on sustainability, resilience, and climate change. He has published in journals including Journal of Cleaner Production, Business Strategy and the Environment, and Journal of Management & Organization.
Layla Branicki is a senior lecturer in the Department of People and Organisations at the Open University Business School, United Kingdom. Layla's research focuses on resilience and corporate social responsibility, and particularly on crisis management. She has published in journals including Academy of Management Perspectives, Academy of Management Discoveries, and Australian Journal of Management.