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Economic Geography of Transportation

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Sewing. Cutting. Processing of cloth. Purchasing of cloth. Logistics. Design ... sewing. packaging. Processed raw mate- rials. Stocks. Transportation. A to B ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Economic Geography of Transportation


1
Economic Geography of Transportation
  • The Danish textile sector
  • The Danish textile and clothing industry is
    concentrated around Herning, Ikast and Brande
    around the moors of Jutland
  • The start Peasants producing socks and woolen
    goods in parallel with their traditional
    activities
  • A regional specialisation developed in the area.
    Specialisation implies increasing amounts of
    transportation

2
Economic Geography of Transportation
  • Textiles and clothing General market trends
  • International regulations
  • Market saturation, excess capacity and price
    consciousness
  • New customer attitudes and priorities
  • Need for faster adjustment to changes in demand
    and flexibility in general

3
Economic Geography of Transportation
  • Changes in the demand for clothing
  • Demand for products reflecting lifestile
  • Demand for signals reflecting values and
    attitudes
  • Increasing demand for design and product
    development
  • Development of several sub-cultures with
    different values and lifestyles

4
Economic geography of transportation
  • Divergence in the market is created by the
    following factors
  • Competencies and knowledge is an increasing part
    of products in the textile sector
  • Focus on design concepts and branding
  • Increasing target group differentiation
  • Development of own retail concepts (shop in the
    shop or franchising)
  • Development of e-trade
  • Convergence in the market is created by two
    factors
  • Supplyers of branded product increasingly
    combines fashion, lifestyle and low prices
  • The large retail shops increasingly focus on
    fashion and lifestyle

5
Economic Geography of Transportation
  • Parallel development trends
  • Concentration, and integration in the processes
    of manufacturing and trade
  • Development of an international division of
    labour, based on differences in wage and cost
    levels.
  • Increasing international trade in finished
    clothing products
  • This in turn leads to increasing need for
    transportation, and for investments, among other
    things in IT

6
Economic Geography of Transportation
  • Home country In low-cost country

7
Economic Geography of Transportation
  • Freight implications
  • Moving manufacturing activities in the clothing
    industry abroad leads to a significan increase
    and complication of the transportation, in
    particular through the use of Outward-Processing-T
    raffic and Cut- Make- and-Trim
  • Sourcing from Own Design covers an increasing
    part of the clothing industry, in particular
    among the largest actors. Changing to SOD, where
    raw materials do not pass through Denmark limits
    freight transportation in Denmark and globally.
  • Narrowing the focus to smaller end user groups
    for specific product selections and the
    fragmentation of markets further complicates the
    transport of finished products to the end users

8
Economic Geography of Transportation
Denmark
Denmark
Poland/Baltics
  • Production
  • sewing
  • packaging

Processed raw mate- rials Stocks
  • Production
  • refining
  • cutting

Raw materials
Finished goods
Stocks
Stocks
Transportation
Transportation
Transportation
A to B
3. pl
Distribution
(Outward Processing Traffic, OPT)
9
Economic Geography of Transportation
  • Raw material supply - simple transportatioon,
    characterised by
  • Large quantities
  • Long distances
  • Low prices, limited additional services
  • Use of international specialised transport
    companies

Transportation
A to B
No major needs beyond price and accuracy
10
Economic Geography of Transportation
  • Outward Processing Traffic - Integrated
    transportation and logistics require
  • Sector knowledge
  • Specialising in transportation of ready made
    clothing
  • Stocks for maintaining stable production flows
  • Flexibility in connection with delivery and
    collection
  • Action within short terms

Transportation
3. pl
Specialisation og flexibility
11
Economic Geography of Transportation
  • From final goods to the end users - a complex
    distribution, characterised by
  • Many destinations
  • Smaller consignments
  • More frequent consignments
  • Track-n-trace
  • High quality demand
  • Short transit time
  • E-trade
  • Parcels/mail versus traditional forwarding of
    goods depending on volume and density

Transportation
Distribution
Capacity, reliability, IT og efficiency
12

Economic Geography of Transportation
  • Importance of competence based clusters
  • Implication in general
  • Concentration of competencies related to the
    sector
  • Increasing market knowledge
  • Existence of a specific infrastructures
  • Implications for transportation demand
  • Creating dynamics large quantities and a quick
    distribution
  • Improved possibilities for common transports
    reduce costs
  • Extensive knowledge on specialised transport
    companies
  • Pressure on transport companies to keep a good
    sector knowledge

13
Economic Geography of Transportation
  • What factors are decisive for the demand for
  • transportation and transport centres
  • Patterns of raw materials supply
  • Organisation and amount of production
  • Geographic dispersion of markets and distribution

14
Transportens erhvervsøkonomiske geografi
  • Conclusions
  • In spite of considerable transportation distances
    and quantities, the pattern of production and the
    international division of labour is only
    marginally affected by transportation costs
  • Competencies are apparantly more important than
    transport costs when considering localisation of
    enterprises
  • The demand for transportation is a derivative of
    the production pattern, not vice versa. This
    means that transport costs have a decreasing
    importance
  • There is an increasing use of flexible
    transportation of parcels by mail. This allows an
    incrasing standardisation and automation.

15
Transportens erhvervsøkonomiske geografi
  • Relevance for other industrial sectors
  • Wood industry Transportation of raw material has
    still more weight than optimisation of the whole
    process, but transportation costs has a
    remarkably decreasing importance
  • Metal and Machinery industry specialisation is
    mainly based on competencies and knowledge, but
    parts of the sector within higly advanced product
    groups have characteristics like the clothing
    industry (electronics)
  • Food industry International specialisation is
    limited by the national regulations of the
    agricultural and food markets. Small changes will
    lead to drastic increases in the demand for
    transportation services

16
Transportens erhvervsøkonomiske geografi
  • Conclusions
  • Globalisation of the production and marketing
    processes offer large benefits from utilisation
    of low cost producers and economies of scale
  • These benefits often, more than off-sets the
    increasing transport costs involved in changed
    organisation of the manufacturing
  • In addition, raw materials have a decreasing
    importance as part of final products.
  • This lead to the general conclusions that
  • Transport costs have a decreasing importance for
    location and organisation of manufacturing
  • Small changes in the markets may lead to
    considerable and unforeseen changes in the
    pattern of transportation
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