BIGGER MAY BE BETTER, BUT IS OLDER WISER - ORGANIZATIONAL AGE AND SIZE IN THE NEW-YORK LIFE-INSURANCE INDUSTRY

Authors
Citation
J. Rangermoore, BIGGER MAY BE BETTER, BUT IS OLDER WISER - ORGANIZATIONAL AGE AND SIZE IN THE NEW-YORK LIFE-INSURANCE INDUSTRY, American sociological review, 62(6), 1997, pp. 903-920
Citations number
73
ISSN journal
00031224
Volume
62
Issue
6
Year of publication
1997
Pages
903 - 920
Database
ISI
SICI code
0003-1224(1997)62:6<903:BMBBBI>2.0.ZU;2-I
Abstract
! explore the effects of organizational size and age on failure rates among New York life insurance companies between 1813 and 1985. Theoris ts tend to agree that organizational growth and aging processes increa se organizational inertia, but they disagree on the effect of that ine rtia on failure rates. I find that organizational size affects failure rates nonmonotonically, brit over the actual range of sizes, large si ze almost always lowers failure rates. I also find a strong liability of aging; this runs counter to ecological theories of liabilities of n ewness and adolescence. An empirical test of the relative effects of a ge during periods of environmental turbulence and calm indicates that organizational inertia is especially problematic during turbulent time s. This suggests that the liability of aging occurs more through obsol escence than senescence, at least in the population of insurance compa nies I investigate.