Date: 2014
Type: Technical Report
Business groups in network industries
Technical Report, Network Industries Quarterly, 2014, Vol. 16, No. 4[Florence School of Regulation], [Transport]
ALUCHNA, Maria, FINGER, Matthias, BERT, Nadia, KUPFER, David (editor/s), ALUCHNA, Maria, FINGER, Matthias, BERT, Nadia, KUPFER, David, Business groups in network industries, Network Industries Quarterly, 2014, Vol. 16, No. 4[Florence School of Regulation], [Transport] - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/34257
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
The 2014 Winter issue of the Network Industries Quarterly is dedicated to the topic of “Business Groups in Network Industries”. Business groups are generally understood as collections of heterogeneous companies tied together by formal and informal links and are distinguished in the management literature as the unique organisational form differing from stand-alone companies. Business groups can be holdings, conglomerates or corporate groups and are particularly widespread in the network industries. This issue of the Network Industries Quarterly presents three articles discussing functioning of business groups in the specific conductions of network industries. Its goal is to provide the theoretical framework on business groups indicating the dimensions of their functioning as well as to confront the theory with some practical illustrations and cases. The issue also intends to open a wider discussion on the role, benefits and shortcoming of business groups operating in Europe and worldwide. In the first article Maria Aluchna using the examples of four cases from Poland discusses the characteristics of business groups and indicates the potential benefits they offer to network industries. The second contribution is delivered by Jana Pieriegud who analyses the evolution and organizational forms of corporate groups in the rail freight sector in Poland focusing on the strategies of PKP Cargo Logistics Group and CTL Logistics Group are discussed. Finally Miroslav Stojsavljevic in the third article presents the example of Serbian water management companies acting as a specific business group addressing the functioning of public companies dealing with natural resources and showing the complexity of this form of economic activity.
Table of Contents:
-- Business groups in Network Industries, Maria Aluchna - Warsaw School of Economics, Poland
-- Corporate Groups in Poland’s Rail Freight Industry, Jana Pieriegud – Warsaw School of Economics, Poland
-- Water Management Companies in Serbia: Business Group or not?, Miroslav Stojsavljevic - University Business Academy in Novi Sad, Serbia
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/34257
ISSN: 1662-6176
Series/Number: [Florence School of Regulation]; [Transport]
Publisher: Chair MIR – EPFL
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