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Synchronized Factories

Latin America and the Caribbean in the Era of Global Value Chains

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About this book

The objective of this report is to examine the extent to which countries in Latin America and the Caribbean participate in global value chains and what are the drivers of such participation. Production processes have been increasingly fragmented worldwide. For example, the production of the Boeing 787 Dreamliner involves 43 suppliers located in 135 locations around the globe. There are many examples like the Dreamliner, from the 451 parts that go into the iPod to the less technologically intensive but still widespread multi-country production of a Barbie doll. All this reflects significant changes in the way world production is being reorganized across national borders. That is, for many goods, production has become a multi-country process in which different stages are carried out in specialized plants in different parts of the world. Countries which specialize in different stages of the production process are thus linked by these global value chains. For developing countries, a clear opportunity from the continuous international fragmentation of production arises in the form of participating in activities that were virtually not opened to them in the past. Therefore, the international fragmentation of production provides opportunities for trade diversification, an issue that can be of particular importance for Latin America and the Caribbean as the region’s export base is in general highly concentrated in a few industries and particularly biased towards natural-resource intensive sectors. The aim is to identify whether there is policy space for implementing strategies that allow countries to improve their position in regional and global value chains.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter

Open Access

Chapter 1. Preliminaries: Concepts, Trends, and Frameworks
Abstract
This chapter presents background that will provide context for the rest of the report, including key concepts and frameworks, recent trends in the emergence of production sharing, and a discussion on the potential benefits and risks of joining global supply chains.
Juan S. Blyde

Open Access

Chapter 2. The Participation of Latin America and the Caribbean in International Supply Chains
Abstract
As mentioned in the previous chapter, the concept of international supply chain is typically understood as a group of firms in different countries that work together—from the design to the distribution of a product—under the coordination of a lead firm that seeks to minimize total system costs. Unfortunately, very few existing trade or foreign direct investment databases provide enough information to verify that the cross-border transactions that economists observe conform to this definition. Therefore, short of working with case studies, empirical research in this area has relied primarily on proxies to measure value-chain participation.
Juan S. Blyde

Open Access

Chapter 3. The Drivers of Global Value Chain Participation: Cross-Country Analyses
Abstract
Building on the work of Jones and Kierzkowski (1990), economists have been writing models that describe how firms are increasingly fragmenting production processes into various stages or tasks and moving them to more advantageous locations (e.g., Deardorff, 2001a, 2001b; Findlay & Jones, 2001; Grossman & Rossi-Hansberg, 2008; Jones & Kierzkowski, 2000, 2001). Most of the models in this literature draw on findings from an earlier literature on FDI, namely that firms will fragment production or tasks across different countries to arbitrage international differences in factor prices (Helpman, 1984; Helpman & Krugman, 1985). The rationale behind most models of fragmentation can be stated in simple terms: in traditional production processes, inputs are organized and combined to generate final outputs in the same location. Where there are many inputs, coordination is normally necessary and proximity helps to lower the costs of coordination and transportation. But if firms could separate the production process into different production blocks and relocate them in places with lower factor prices, the total costs of production could be further reduced. Therefore firms will unbundle their production processes, as long as the resulting reduction in production costs would more than compensate for the additional costs of coordinating remotely located production blocks and moving these production blocks around.
Juan S. Blyde

Open Access

Chapter 4. What It Takes to Join an International Value Chain: The Firm-Level Evidence
Abstract
The previous chapter examined factors affecting global value chain participation that are mostly external to the firm, such as the role of a country’s transport infrastructure or the quality of its contracting institutions. Now we turn to determinants of GVC accession that are specific to the firms themselves, such as skills and capabilities. The theme of this chapter is that participation in international production networks typically demands skills and capabilities that often exceed levels found in firms that only serve the domestic market. While firms are responsible for the development of their own capacities, they also face constraints in attaining these capacities that include lack of information and coordination. In this chapter we discuss policy options for reducing these constraints.
Juan S. Blyde

Open Access

Chapter 5. Conclusions
Abstract
Terms such as global value chains, globalization of production, and slicing the value added chain have emerged in recent years to describe the co-participation of countries in the design, production, and distribution of a good or service. Some may argue that beyond the semantics and the sometimes catchy terminology, there is not much LAC can learn about policy issues on this topic; after all, the region has been providing raw inputs and natural resource intensive goods to other countries for decades.
Juan S. Blyde
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Synchronized Factories
Editor
Juan S. Blyde
Copyright Year
2014
Electronic ISBN
978-3-319-09991-0
Print ISBN
978-3-319-09990-3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-09991-0