Global value chains (GVCs) involve multinational enterprises locating different parts of the production process across multiple countries to take advantage of lower costs and maximize efficiency. Through GVCs, business activities have become more interconnected globally as companies offshore labor-intensive work and locate research and development in different nations. Governments have responded by cutting corporate taxes and incentives to attract these companies and remain competitive in the changing international economic landscape presented by GVCs.
Global value chains (GVCs) involve multinational enterprises locating different parts of the production process across multiple countries to take advantage of lower costs and maximize efficiency. Through GVCs, business activities have become more interconnected globally as companies offshore labor-intensive work and locate research and development in different nations. Governments have responded by cutting corporate taxes and incentives to attract these companies and remain competitive in the changing international economic landscape presented by GVCs.
Global value chains (GVCs) involve multinational enterprises locating different parts of the production process across multiple countries to take advantage of lower costs and maximize efficiency. Through GVCs, business activities have become more interconnected globally as companies offshore labor-intensive work and locate research and development in different nations. Governments have responded by cutting corporate taxes and incentives to attract these companies and remain competitive in the changing international economic landscape presented by GVCs.
Global value chains (GVCs) involve multinational enterprises locating different parts of the production process across multiple countries to take advantage of lower costs and maximize efficiency. Through GVCs, business activities have become more interconnected globally as companies offshore labor-intensive work and locate research and development in different nations. Governments have responded by cutting corporate taxes and incentives to attract these companies and remain competitive in the changing international economic landscape presented by GVCs.
Often multinational enterprises (MNEs) developed global value chains, investing abroad and establishing affiliates that provided critical support to remaining activities at home. To enhance efficiency and to optimize profits, multinational enterprises locate "research, development, design, assembly, production of parts, marketing and branding" activities in different countries around the globe. MNEs offshore labour-intensive activities to China and Mexico, for example, where the cost of labor is the lowest.(Gurra 2012)[4] the emergence of global value chains (GVCs) in the late 1990s provided a catalyst for accelerated change in the landscape of international investment and trade, with major, far-reaching consequences on governments as well as enterprises.(Gurra 2012)[4] Global value chains (GVCs) in development
Through global value chains, there has been growth in interconnectedness as MNEs play an increasingly larger role in the internationalisation of business. In response, governments have cut Corporate income tax (CIT) rates or introduced new incentives for research and development to compete in this changing geopolitical landscape.(LeBlanc et al. 6)[5]
In an (industrial) development context, the concepts of Global Value Chain analysis were first introduced in the 1990s (Gereffi et al.)[6] and have gradually been integrated into development policy by the World Bank, Unctad,[7] the OECD and others.
Value chain analysis has also been employed in the development sector as a means of identifying poverty reduction strategies by upgrading along the value chain.[8] Although commonly associated with export-oriented trade, development practitioners have begun to highlight the importance of developing national and intra-regional chains in addition to international ones.[9]
For example, the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) has investigated strengthening the value chain for sweet sorghum as a biofuel crop in India. Its aim in doing so was to provide a sustainable means of making ethanol that would increase the incomes of the rural poor, without sacrificing food and fodder security, while protecting the environment.[10] Firm-level
The appropriate level for constructing a value chain is the business unit,[11] not division or corporate level. Products pass through activities of a chain in order, and at each activity the product gains some value. The chain of activities gives the products more added value than the sum of added values of all activities.[11]
The activity of a diamond cutter can illustrate the difference between cost and the value chain. The cutting activity may have a low cost, but the activity adds much of the value to the end product, since a rough diamond is significantly less valuable than a cut diamond. Typically, the described value chain and the documentation of processes, assessment and auditing of adherence to the process routines are at the core of the quality certification of the business, e.g. ISO 9001.[citation needed] Activities
Competitive advantage cannot be understood by looking at a firm as a whole. It stems from the many discrete activities a firm performs in designing, producing, marketing, delivering and supporting its product. Each of these activities can contribute to a firm's relative cost position and create a basis for differentiation. Michael Porter[12]
The value chain categorizes the generic value-adding activities of an organization. The activities considered under this product/service enhancement process can be broadly categorized under two major activity-sets.
Physical/traditional value chain: a physical-world activity performed in order to enhance a product or a service. Such activities evolved over time by the experience people gained from their business conduct. As the will to earn higher profit drives any business,[citation needed] professionals (trained/untrained) practice these to achieve their goal. Virtual value chain: The advent of computer-based business-aided systems in the modern world has led to a completely new horizon of market space in modern business-jargon - the cyber- market space. Like any other field of computer application, here also we have tried to implement our physical world's practices to improve this digital world. All activities of persistent physical world's physical value-chain enhancement process, which we implement in the cyber-market, are in general terms referred to[by whom?] as a virtual value chain.
In practice as of 2013, no progressive organisation can afford to remain stuck to any one of these value chains. In order to cover both market spaces (physical world and cyber world), organisations need to deploy their very best practices in both of these spaces to churn out the most informative data,[citation needed] which can further be used to improve the ongoing products/services or to develop some new product/service. Hence organisations today try to employ the combined value chain.