6533b856fe1ef96bd12b1d02

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Innovation cooperative systems and structural change: An evolutionary analysis of Anecoop and Mondragon cases

Juan Ramon Gallego BonoRafael Chaves-avila

subject

MarketingEntrepreneurship9. Industry and infrastructure05 social sciencesInnovation processNoveltyPublic policy[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and FinanceCompetitive advantage[SHS]Humanities and Social SciencesStructural change0502 economics and businessEconomicsProduction (economics)Evolutionism050207 economicsEconomic system050203 business & management

description

International audience; In a globalized world, clusters, or territorial production systems, need to evolve into innovation systems to retain their competitive advantages and be able to develop. This study analyzes the cooperative entrepreneurship model as a means of structural change for these clusters, constituting a third way between the private business way and the government-oriented way. Building on an evolutionist approach and a qualitative comparative methodology, the study analyzes two successful cooperatives: Mondragon and Anecoop. As a novelty, this article explains the innovation process from an institutional perspective, combining micro–meso–macro levels. The results confirm that cooperatives are able to articulate structural change processes at the meso-level and to give rise to meso-rules that are functional and determinant in the processes of structural change. The two factors that enable these processes are the cooperative Schumpeterian entrepreneurs and the Hayekian meta-institutions.

10.1016/j.jbusres.2016.04.051https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01867952