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Cloud adoption in emerging economies: A Costa Rican RBV-SAM Analysis (#114)

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Date of Conference

December 1-3, 2025

Published In

"Entrepreneurship with Purpose: Social and Technological Innovation in the Age of AI"

Location of Conference

Cartagena

Authors

Silva Atencio, Gabriel

Abstract

This research meticulously assesses the effectiveness of public cloud solutions in Costa Rica, using a mixed-methods framework to address the dichotomy between the democratizing potential of cloud computing and its actual results in developing countries. By combining Resource-Based View (RBV) theory with regional contextual analysis, we look at data from 200 firms and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) interviews to uncover three important things: (1) Enterprises achieve 22% greater cost savings than Small and Medium-sized Enterprise (SMEs) (*p* < 0.05), underscoring RBV’s resource advantage hypothesis while exposing its neglect of contextual barriers like regulatory fragmentation (29% higher compliance costs) and talent scarcity; (2) Leadership commitment mediates 68% of performance variance (β = 0.68), necessitating the expansion of Strategic Alignment Models (SAM) to include cultural preparedness as a measurable construct; and (3) Costa Rica’s reliance on foreign hyperscale’s exacerbates latency (40% worse than global averages) and vendor lock-in (63% prevalence), challenging universalist cloud frameworks. The research presents a Strategic-Regional Alignment Model (SRAM) that incorporates legal readiness assessments and infrastructural standards, in addition to a validated five-dimensional cultural readiness instrument. Policy suggestions for regulatory harmonization (like a National Cloud Office) and solutions for small and medium-sized businesses (like multi-cloud pilots) are some of the practical consequences.

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