Font Size: a A A

Organizational success during institutional transition: The S.N. Fyodorov 'eye microsurgery' comple

Posted on:2013-05-12Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of DelawareCandidate:Matvejeva, ArinaFull Text:PDF
GTID:1459390008990447Subject:Economic history
Abstract/Summary:
What determines organizational survival and success across different institutional regimes? The present historical case study attempts to answer the question by analyzing the evolution of a Russian state medical institution, i.e. the S.N. Fyodorov "Inter-Sectoral Research and Technology Complex "Eye Microsurgery"". The study spans over four clearly defined regimes: 1960 - 1985 (Soviet Russia, pre-perestroika period), 1986 - 1991 (Gorbachev's perestroika), 1992 - 2000 (the transition years), and 2001 - 2009 (current Russia, post-Fyodorov period). The analysis focuses on the co-evolution of the external institutions and the firm's organizational structure, the system of property rights, innovation patterns and the channels of technological diffusion. The findings suggest that the general institutional environment exerts influence on the firm's performance through determining the "rules of the game" for economic transactions and through establishing a set of development possibilities. It is then the firm's internal processes, dynamic competences and the ability to innovate that determine whether the organization can adapt to external changes, recognize the development possibilities and take advantage of them. In addition, the roles of leadership, the type of technology and its diffusion scope, initial State support, as well as the extent of demand are apparent in sustaining successful performance. Multi-level high performance rewards structure in combination with novel industrialized treatment methods (e.g. the use of a surgical conveyer and team production) resulted in greater volumes of clinical procedures performed, as well as higher quality, complexity and diversity of treatment. In addition, at the earlier stages of the firm's development, the presence of prolific innovators and the organizational structure that supported learning, knowledge production and accumulation (the "clinic - engineering - approbation - production - clinic" cycle) were crucial for creating a basis for persistent innovation. In later periods, the combination of resource availability (material, financial, human capital), external collaborations, novel ways of organizing treatment, extensive inter and intra-firm diffusion of technologies also contributed to high levels of innovation. Overall, the work provides support for an interdisciplinary approach to the study of organizations, i.e. combining institutional analysis, evolutionary and dynamic organizational economics, strategic management, the economics of innovation, the analysis of property rights and the role of leadership.
Keywords/Search Tags:Organizational, Institutional, Innovation
Related items