Avoiding relapses after crises: Exploring the influence of firm investors’ characteristics on organizational resilience
Elena Mellado-Garcia, Natalia Ortiz-de-Mandojana, Juan Alberto Aragon-Correa- Economics and Econometrics
- General Business, Management and Accounting
- Business and International Management
- Strategy and Management
Many firms may successfully navigate an organizational crisis, but may find themselves entangled in another soon after. Building on a resource-dependence perspective, this study evaluates how certain investor characteristics foster organizational resilience during a crisis by preventing a relapse following recovery. Drawing on data from 2014 to 2019, we analyzed 359 firms that faced a crisis in 2015, as indicated by their Altman Z-score values. Our findings reveal that diversity and patience of investors prevent firms from relapsing into upcoming crises; however, the probability of relapse increases when concentrated investors boost the firm’s capital during the in-crisis period. We bridge the gap between the resource-dependence theory and literature on organizational resilience and contribute by extending previous analyses on the relevance of investors to recover from a crisis to identify how in-crisis investors’ features also state the foundations to avoid future relapses.
JEL CLASSIFICATION: D74; D81; G01; G32; P45