Global Value Chain Restructuring - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 15
About This Presentation
Title:

Global Value Chain Restructuring

Description:

The key concepts are not new. Three key concepts, going back to the 18th century ... codification and capabilities, identified by Gereffi Humphrey & Sturgeon ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:66
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 16
Provided by: KE68
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Global Value Chain Restructuring


1
Global Value Chain Restructuring
Ursula Huws, Professor of International Labour
Studies, London Metropolitan University
WORKS Conference Fragmentation? The future of
work in Europe in a global economy Rome, 8-9
October, 2008
2
The key concepts are not new
  • Three key concepts, going back to the 18th
    century enlightenment
  • the division of labour
  • The division of labour, however, so far as it
    can be introduced, occasions, in every art, a
    proportionable increase of the productive powers
    of labour. The separation of different trades and
    employments from one another seems to have taken
    place in consequence of this advantage. (Adam
    Smith, 1776 Book 1, Chapter I).
  • the labour theory of value
  • The value which the workmen add to the
    materials, therefore, resolves itself into two
    parts, of which the one pays their wages, the
    other the profits of their employer upon the
    whole stock of materials and wages which he
    advanced. (ibid Book 1, Chapter VI).
  • Smith also argues that services contribute to
    this added value
  • the concept of comparative advantage (Ricardo,
    1817) adds a spatial dimension

3
Put these together and you have a model of a
value chain
  • businesses are broken down into trades,
    branches or functions
  • the more specialist this division of labour, the
    more value is added in each operation
  • the comparative advantage of regions makes it
    profitable to introduce a spatial dimension to
    the division of labour (but this may be
    constrained by limits to free operation of
    markets movements of capital)
  • centralised governance is necessary for its
    functioning
  • Quesnay (1758) introduced the key concept of
    flows, making it possible to model this at the
    level of a national economy in terms of inputs
    and outputs between sectors

4
the generic business function as a basic unit of
analysis
  • a functional approach (Quesnay, 1758))
  • also found in Marx who uses the term functions
    of labour capacity (1861-64)
  • underlies some (but not all) statistical
    classification systems, used, e.g. to construct
    input-output tables
  • systematised by Taylor (1911) who broke all
    labour processes down into tasks which had to
    be scientifically managed.
  • the concept of the value chain resurfaced in the
    1970s inter alia in work on the new
    international division of labour (Froebel,
    Heinrichs Krey, 1977)
  • and in the 1980s in management theory (Porter
    1985) who also used the concept of business
    function
  • used for the first time as the basis of a major
    survey by EMERGENCE project, 2000.

5
The underlying dynamics of structural change
  • The transformation of tacit knowledge into
    codified knowledge
  • Standardisation of existing processes which in
    turn makes possible
  • Management by results (or performance
    indicators) which in turn makes possible
  • Remote management displacement in terms of both
    time and space
  • Organisational disaggregation (either internally
    or externally which in turn leads to
  • Elaboration of value chains contractually
    (proliferation of separate legal entitities) or
    spatially or both

6
Different forms of restructuring
in-house
outsourced
  • temp agency
  • body shopping
  • spin-off company
  • external supplier working on premises
  • separate cost centre
  • market testing
  • reskilling
  • introduction of new working practices

at existing site
  • offshore to dependent company
  • offshore to global supplier
  • offshore to strategic partner
  • back office
  • home teleworkers
  • nomadic workers
  • clients premises
  • other branch

at a distance
7
WORKS research questions on value chain
restructuring
  • Is it really the case that value chains are
    getting longer and more elaborated, both
    contractually and spatially?
  • What is the relationship between codification of
    workers knowledge and value chain restructuring?
  • To what extent, and how, do national
    institutional environments shape decisions to
    locate particular business functions on their
    territories?
  • Is there evidence that new types of value chain
    are emerging in business services? And, if so, do
    they follow the same patterns as those in
    manufacturing?
  • What power relationships are emerging between
    managers and employees within the units of value
    chains and between the different units and how is
    this power exercised?
  • How well do existing typologies of value chains
    fit the realities to be found in Europe in the
    early 21st century?

8
The WORKS qualitative research on value chain
restructuring
  • business function as basic unit
  • studied within a particular sectoral context
  • in contrasting national institutional contexts

RD/ Design Production Logistics Customer Service IT
Textiles/ clothing BE FR DE PT IT BE IT PT HU GR FR DE NL PT HU    
Food   GR BG IT NO DK UK BE NO BG GR UK    
IT DE AT UK BE FR NO DE AT HU BG SW      
Public Sector Administration       AT BE BG HU IT UK SW BE NL UK FR DE NO SW PT
Services Of GeneralInterest Post And Rail       DE AT SW NL GR  
9
Conclusions
  • Is it really the case that value chains are
    getting longer and more elaborated, both
    contractually and spatially?
  • In clothing and textiles, continuing trend to
    relocate operational tasks outside EU
    integration of some functions but also new
    intermediaries
  • in IT global sourcing practices make it
    difficult to disentangle contractual and spatial
    restructuring
  • in food (and some other cases) re-integration
    still leaves patterns of fragmentation intact
  • we can conclude that there is strong evidence of
    increasing fragmentation of functions BUT
    modularisation can form the basis of contractual
    or spatial aggregation or disaggregation
    centralisation or decentralisation
  • in general, value chains can be said to be
    becoming more elaborated

10
Conclusions
  • What is the relationship between codification of
    workers knowledge and value chain restructuring?
  • triggers and motives for restructuring vary by
    sector
  • market pressures in the clothing industry,
  • mergers and acquisitions in the food industry
  • need to get closer to market in R D
  • rationalisation, standardisation and access to
    economies of scale in outsourcing of customer
    services and IT
  • in general, the more low-skill the task, the more
    likely it is to be outsourced. But need for
    quality control places some limits on this.
  • we can conclude that workers skills and
    knowledge play an important role in determining
    the forms of value chain restructuring that are
    possible or desirable in any given case.
  • However the direction of causality does not
    necessarily flow in only one direction. Just as
    the standardisation of skills and knowledge can
    lead to a greater likelihood of outsourcing or
    relocation, it is also the case that the process
    of outsourcing or relocation may also lead to
    further standardisation, driving a snowball
    effect (Ramioul Huws, 2008) of continuing
    restructuring.

11
Conclusions
  • To what extent, and how, do national
    institutional environments shape decisions to
    locate particular business functions on their
    territories?
  • race to the bottom hypothesis confirmed for
    low-skill production activities in clothing,
    textiles and food
  • much greater geographical stickiness in
    high-skill activities such as RD
  • in some cases (e.g. clothing industry in Belgium)
    failure of national training strategies led to
    export of jobs
  • in the food industry, work was moved across
    borders to take advantage of lower employment
    regulation
  • national policy definitely shapes practices of
    outsourcing from the public sector
  • sectoral governance may also have a strong
    influence (e.g. in vocational training,
    professional recognition, collective bargaining
    structures)
  • We can conclude tentatively that, whilst national
    institutional environments may provide both
    push and pull factors in value chain
    restructuring, these are generally not the most
    important determinants of locational decisions,
    although they may well determine the specific
    forms that employment restructuring takes in any
    given location.

12
Conclusions
  • Is there evidence that new types of value chain
    are emerging in business services? And, if so, do
    they follow the same patterns as those in
    manufacturing?
  • In RD, patterns are strongly sector-specific
    (clothing, software development)
  • to a lesser extent this is also the case in
    logistics
  • IT services presented a very different case.
    Typically large global companies were supplying
    generic services to customer organisations across
    a range of different sectors, public and private.
  • Software production was viewed in our case
    studies both as a sector and as a function. As a
    sector it is similar to manufacturing industries
    in many respects.
  • There is a developed global division of labour in
    software production which, to the extent that the
    processes are standardised, follows a market
    logic but which generally develops more complex
    and interactive ties with suppliers for a variety
    of reasons, including quality control.
  • This division of labour, as in some manufacturing
    industries, is volatile, with movements up the
    value chain by stronger players and the addition
    of new links below them.
  • typically large companies with internal
    hierarchically organised value chains
  • however relationship with public sector is not
    one of supplying standardised commodities
    contested power relationship
  • sector has large scope for expansion in both
    public and private sector markets
  • expansion is likely to lead to further spatial
    and contractual complexity
  • Customer service appears to have similar
    characteristics but we were only able to study it
    in relation to outsourced public services

13
Conclusions
  • What power relationships are emerging between
    managers and employees within the units of value
    chains and between the different units and how is
    this power exercised?
  • shifts in power relations do not just bring
    pressure to bear on peripheral workforces but
    also on those at the core
  • in clothing, contestation of power between
    retailers and producers, played out through the
    market
  • in other production industries (e.g. food,
    beverages, clothing and textiles) hierarchical
    directives from head office put pressure on units
    lower down the chain.
  • Whether an operation is in-house or outsourced
    may make little difference, especially when
    internal units have to compete with external ones
    (e.g. in software production). What matters is
    the degree of dependency.
  • in IT, pressure from units lower down the value
    chain to move up the chain.
  • Workers with scarce skills may still be able to
    exert considerable influence on value chain
    restructuring (e.g. Norwegian software RD)
  • in the public sector, complex and shifting
    contests between the bureaucratic, regulatory and
    legal power of public sector bodies and the
    market power of global suppliers, played out
    through legal-bureaucratic means, e.g. service
    level agreements
  • we can conclude that there is complex landscape
    with a shifting patterns of power and dependency,
    expressed through a variety of different
    mechanisms.

14
Conclusions
  • How well do existing typologies of value chains
    fit the realities to be found in Europe in the
    early 21st century?
  • typologies are more useful for defining segments
    of value chains than value chains as a whole
    because multiple forms of governance may be found
    along the length of a chain
  • the variables of complexity, codification and
    capabilities, identified by Gereffi Humphrey
    Sturgeon (2005) are indeed important for
    understanding VCR and can offer a basis for
    further research
  • need for distinction between complexity of
    knowledge and complexity of interaction
  • codification is strongly linked to likelihood of
    outsourcing, market-like relations and low
    transaction costs in some sectors. However in
    public sector high codification exists alongside
    high transaction costs.
  • capabilities may be influenced by institutional
    context. important to link this concept to power
    and dependency relations.
  • power is a complex variable that can be exercised
    in multiple ways. further research on power and
    dependency relations within value chains would be
    useful.
  • the usefulness of the concept of the business
    function is validated by this research. the
    availability of survey results using this concept
    will add value and enable further studies
  • need for further research in differing sectoral
    contexts, with a special focus on generic
    business services

15
Finally
  • many of the issues touched on in this
    presentation are addressed in greater detail in
    other WORKS deliverables. See especially the
    reports on
  • organisational case study results
  • quantitative research on finding business
    functions through crossing occupations and
    sectors
  • thematic report on skills
  • thematic report on collective bargaining and
    institutional shaping
  • and coming next year
  • outputs from the policy pillar
  • future scenarios
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com