Breaking up the Global Value Chain

Opportunities and Consequences

Laszlo Tihanyi editor Torben Pedersen editor Timothy M Devinney editor Arnaldo Camuffo editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Emerald Publishing Limited

Published:18th Aug '17

Should be back in stock very soon

Breaking up the Global Value Chain cover

With intensified global competition, institutional changes and reduced communication costs the propensity of firms to reconfigure their global value chain and separate their activities across national boundaries has increased markedly. It enables firms to combine the benefits arising from specialization and increased flexibility with location advantages. Consequently, large parts of manufacturing and other more standardized activities have been offshored to emerging countries. However, recent developments are challenging this traditional separation between advanced and emerging economies as host of knowledge- and production-intensive activities, respectively. Recent research has emphasized the role of intra-organizational relationships and links among the different parts of the value chain. Innovative and productive activities are affected by strong interdependencies and complementarities, and for some companies the co-location of R&D and manufacturing is critical for development and innovation. This volume will interest scholars in International Business, Economic Geography, Operations and Supply Chain Management, International Economics, and Political Science.

Economists and business scholars explore how companies are reconfiguring their global value chains and separating their activities across spatial and organizational boundaries. In sections on case examples, organizational forms, and consequences of fragmenting, they consider such aspects as new business models in-the-making in extant multinational corporations: digital transformation in a telco, global integration strategies in time of crisis: an event study of the impact of the global financial crisis on the exporting strategies of Turkish subsidiaries, tied up and shocked: how relational contracting with suppliers constrains global buyers during an economic crisis, global shift-back's: a strategy for reviving manufacturing competencies, and industrial district firms do not smile: structuring the value chain between local and global. -- Annotation ©2017 * (protoview.com) *

ISBN: 9781787430723

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

376 pages