학술논문

ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE, COMPETITIVENESS AND MANAGEMENT OF SMALL BUSINESSES IN EUROPE.
Document Type
Article
Source
Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie (Journal of Economic & Social Geography). Nov2005, Vol. 96 Issue 5, p541-557. 17p. 9 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*INDUSTRIAL management
*ECONOMIC competition
*CORPORATE environmentalism
*SMALL business
Language
ISSN
0040-747X
Abstract
Is it the case that more competitive SMEs have greater capacity to adopt environmental initiatives? The answer is no, according to this study which tried to link small firm environmental performance to factors such as profitability, growth, skills and research and development. This study focuses on three interrelated propositions that are concerned with the impact of environmental initiatives on firm competitiveness; the relevance of management's awareness to environment: the availability of external information and expertise to aid management, and the competitiveness of the firm. The firm's competitive strengths measured variously as above average profitability, firm growth and R&D, skills and modernity of plant and equipment, there was only scattered evidence to suggest any of these was importantly associated with the firm's environmental performance. The study showed that firms with an average economic performance were just as likely to adopt environmental initiatives as their high-performing competitors. Moreover, regardless of managers voicing personal concerns about the environment, most small firms do relatively little about the environment in practice and are reluctant to seek advice about it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]