Cooperation and punishment in managing social performance: Labor standards in the Gap Inc. supply chain
成果类型:
Article; Early Access
署名作者:
Amengual, Matthew; Distelhorst, Greg
署名单位:
University of Oxford; University of Toronto; University of Toronto
刊物名称:
STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT JOURNAL
ISSN/ISSBN:
0143-2095
DOI:
10.1002/smj.3733
发表日期:
2025
关键词:
GLOBAL SUPPLY CHAINS
inter-firm relations
LABOR
multinational management
regulation
Social responsibility
摘要:
Research SummaryCorporate social performance depends not only on a firm's behavior but also on the behavior of its suppliers. What management strategies improve the social performance of suppliers? Scholarship on inter-firm relations and regulatory governance debates the efficacy of threatening to penalize suppliers, compared with more cooperative approaches. This study uses a regression discontinuity design to estimate the causal effects of typical actions to manage supplier social performance, both with and without threatened penalties. Suppliers improved social performance-increasing their probability of passing labor audits by 22 percentage points-only when regulatory actions included a threatened penalty: to discontinue business. Suppliers improved most in response to threatened penalties when they faced higher levels of supply chain competition or were engaged in longer-term commercial relationships with the buyer.Managerial SummaryHow can multinationals improve labor standards in their suppliers around the world? We compared two approaches at the clothing retailer Gap Inc. When Gap did not threaten to discontinue business with low-performing suppliers, we found no improvement in labor compliance when Gap issued failing compliance grades. However, once Gap began threatening to discontinue business with its lowest-compliance suppliers, failing suppliers showed marked improvement in labor compliance. Failing suppliers improved most when (a) they faced high competition within their product category, and (b) when they were in longer-term commercial relationships with the buyer. Our findings suggest buyers should use a combination of both threats and cooperation with suppliers to improve labor standards in global supply chains.