View detailed call for papers
Transcrição
View detailed call for papers
SASE 2015 Call for paper for Session on Research Network O: Global Value Chains GVC in Advanced Economies: Re-shoring and Re-industrialization Co-Organizers: Mariachiara Barzotto, Ca’ Foscari University Venice, [email protected] Giancarlo Corò, Ca’ Foscari University Venice, [email protected] Lisa De Propris, Birmingham Business School, University of Birmingham, [email protected] Mario Volpe, Ca’ Foscari University Venice, [email protected] ABSTRACT In the last decades, the global economy has gone through an intense reorganisation. This change has been characterised by a cross-border fragmentation of the production processes that has given rise to the formation of global value chains (Gereffi et al., 2001). Companies localised in high-income economies have mainly focused on performing high value-added upstream and downstream activities, offshoring low value-added operations to low-cost labour locations. More recently the benefits of this tendency for advanced economies has been questioned (Pisano and Shih, 2012; Berger, 2013), since offshoring has triggered deindustrialisation process that has threatened innovation capabilities. Indeed, the relocation of operations away from industrialised nations has led to the erosion of manufacturing competences, skills (Bailey et al., 2010), and - in general - of all the Marshallian externalities of the domestic environment that have supported the growth of high-income countries in the past. In order to counter these negative trends, enterprises based in in advanced economies have started “moving manufacturing back to the country of its parent company” (Ellram, 2013: 3), a phenomenon referred to as re-shoring. The reshoring trend has impacted the structure of the Global Value Chains (GVCs) by re-defining the optimal location for manufacturing and the relationships among the actors engaged with the GVC. Enterprises that have decided to bring their production activities back and/or near to their country of origin had to face a domestic environment that is different from the one they left. Indeed, offshoring processes may have progressively hollowed out local resources, such as the downgrading of skills and the erosion of industrial “ecosystems” (Berger, 2013). Notwithstanding a growing body of research that is drawing attention to this discourse (see Christopherson et al., 2014), there are important issues that have been overlooked. This paper session aims to investigate to what extent advanced countries could undertake re-industrialisation processes in order to boost their long-term competitiveness. We encourage contributions that provide insight on (but not limited to) themes such as: • Why and how Western industrialised economies should try to rebuild their manufacturing heritage? • What are the main features of re-shoring processes? In particular, what are the emerging trends in terms of business functions (Brown et al., 2013) that companies are moving back? • How can we measure the erosion of industrial commons (Pisano and Shih, 2012) that characterise the advanced economies? • To what extent should policy-makers support and promote a manufacturing renaissance in advanced countries? • How can education systems (higher education, vocational education and training) intervene to tackle skill shortage in Western industrialised economies? We invite papers that address these issues on theoretical, methodological or empirical level, or some combination. REFERENCES Bailey, D., Bellandi, M., Caloffi, A., and De Propris, L. 2010. Place-renewing leadership: trajectories of change for mature manufacturing regions in Europe. Policy Studies. 31(4): 457-474. Berger, S. 2013. Making in America. From Innovation to Market. The MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Brown, C., Sturgeon, T. and Cole, C. 2013. The 2010 National Organizations Survey: Examining the Relationships Between Job Quality and the Domestic and International Sourcing of Business Functions by United States Organizations. IRLE Working Paper No. 156-13. Christopherson, S., Martin, R., Sunley, P., and Tyler, P. 2014. Reindustrialising regions: rebuilding the manufacturing economy?. Cambridge Journal of Regions, Economy and Society, 7(3):351-358. Ellram, L.M. 2013. Off-shoring, reshoring and the manufacturing location decision. Journal of Supply Chain Management. 49(2):3–5. Gereffi, G., Humphrey, J., Kaplinsky, R. and Sturgeon, T. J. 2001. Introduction: Globalisation, Value Chains and Development. IDS Bulletin, 32: 1–8. Pisano, G. P., and Shih, W. 2012. Producing Prosperity: Why America Needs a Manufacturing Renaissance. Boston, MA: Harvard Business Review Press.