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Intellectual capital and financial performance in social cooperative enterprises

Nick Bontis (DeGroote School of Business, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada)
Massimo Ciambotti (Department of Economics, Society and Politics, University of Urbino, Urbino, Italy)
Federica Palazzi (Department of Economics, Society and Politics, University of Urbino, Urbino, Italy)
Francesca Sgro (Department of Economics, Society and Politics, University of Urbino, Urbino, Italy)

Journal of Intellectual Capital

ISSN: 1469-1930

Article publication date: 2 July 2018

Issue publication date: 10 July 2018

2209

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to provide empirical evidence of the relationship between intellectual capital (IC) and economic performance, with focus on social cooperative enterprises (SCEs) that work in non-profit sectors.

Design/methodology/approach

A survey was developed and administered in Italy. A final sample of 151 SCEs participated in the study. Data were collected on IC measures, social enterprise activities and economic and mission-based performance outcomes.

Findings

Two hypotheses that proposed a positive association between IC sub-components (i.e. human capital, structural capital and relational capital) and the economic and mission-based performance of SCEs were tested. Findings highlight that human capital contributes to explain economic performance which is positively affected by the presence of graduate employees and value added per employee. However, economic performance is negatively affected by the yearly training per employee. In addition, human and relational capital contribute to explain mission-based performance which is positively affected by yearly training, the value added per employee and the quality of relationships with customers. However, mission-based performance is negatively affected by the relationships’ quality with the reference territorial community. Therefore, relational capital would seem to affect only mission-based performance, and human capital influences both dimensions of corporate performance. Structural capital does not affect social cooperatives’ performance.

Practical implications

Some of the results in this study are particular to this research setting. It is therefore important for senior leaders of SCEs to take the results of general IC literature with a grain of salt. Whereas most of the academic literature generally supports the positive relationship of all IC sub-components (i.e. human, structural and relational capital) with performance outcomes, this is not the case in this particular study.

Originality/value

This is the first empirical study that has examined the linkages between IC sub-components and performance outcomes in SCEs in Italy.

Keywords

Citation

Bontis, N., Ciambotti, M., Palazzi, F. and Sgro, F. (2018), "Intellectual capital and financial performance in social cooperative enterprises", Journal of Intellectual Capital, Vol. 19 No. 4, pp. 712-731. https://doi.org/10.1108/JIC-03-2017-0049

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2018, Emerald Publishing Limited

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