Title: Vertical Integration and The Scope of the Firm
1Vertical Integration and The Scope of the Firm
OUTLINE
- Transactions Costs and the Scope of the Firm
- --Why does the firm exist?
- --The evolution of firms and markets
- The Costs and Benefits of Vertical Integration
- Designing Vertical Relationships
- Recent Trends
2From Business Strategy to Corporate Strategy The
Scope of the Firm
- Business Strategy is concerned with how a firm
computes within a particular market - Corporate Strategy is concerned with where a firm
competes, i.e. the scope of its activities - The dimensions of scope are
- geographical scope
- vertical scope
- product scope
3Transactions Costs and the Scope of the Firm
Vertical Product Geographical Scope Scope Scope
V1 V2 V3
A Single Integrated Firm
P3
P2
P1
C3
C2
C1
B Several Specialized Firms linked by Markets
V1
P1
P2
P3
C1
C2
C3
V2
V3
In situation A the business units are
integrated within a single firm. In situation B
the business units are independent firms linked
by markets. Are the administrative costs of the
integrated firm less than the transaction costs
of markets?
4Transactions Costs and The Existence of the Firm
- Transaction cost theory explains not just the
boundaries - of firms, also the existence of firms.
- In 18th century English woollen industry, no
firms - independent spinners and weavers linked by
merchants. - Residential remodeling industry -- mainly
independent self- - employed builders, plumbers, electricians,
painters. - Key issue -- transaction costs of the market vs.
- administrative costs of firms.
- Where transaction costs highfirm is more
efficient means - of organization
- Note transaction costs comprise costs of search
and contract negotiationg and enforcement
5Aggregate Concentration in US Manufacturing,
1947-97
6Determinants of Changes in Corporate Scope
- 1800 1980 Expanding scale and scope of
industrial corporations due to - declining administrative costs of firms
- Advances in transportation, information and
communication - technologies
- Advances in managementaccounting systems,
decision sciences, - financial techniques, organizational
innovations, scientific management
1980 1995 Shrinking size and scope of biggest
industrial corporations. Increasingly
Increased no. of managerial Admin. costs
of turbulent decisions. Need for fast firms
rise relative external responses to external
to transaction environment change costs of
markets
1995 2007 Rapid increase in global
concentration (steel, aluminium, oil, beer,
banking, cement). Key drivers quest for market
power and scale economies. Also, large
corporations better at reconciling size with
agility
7The Costs and Benefits of Vertical Integration
BENEFITS
- Technical economies from integrating processes
e.g. iron and steel production - but doesnt necessarily require common
ownership - Superior coordination
- Avoids transactions costs of market contracts in
situations where there are - -- small numbers of firms
- -- transaction-specific investments
- -- opportunism and strategic misrepresentation
- -- taxes and regulations on market transactions
8The Costs and Benefits of Vertical Integration
COSTS
- Differences in optimal scale of operation between
different stages prevents balanced VI - Strategic differences between different vertical
stages creates management difficulties - Inhibits development of and exploitation of core
competencies - Limits flexibility -- in responding to demand
cycles - -- in responding to changes in
technology, - customer preferences, etc.
- (But, VI may be conducive to system-wide
flexibility) - Compounding of risk
9When is Vertical Integration More Attractive
than Outsourcing?
- How many firms are available The fewer the
companies - to undertake the activities? the more
attractive is VI - Is transaction-specific investment If yes, VI
more attractive - needed?
- Does limited information permit VI can limit
opportunism - cheating?
- Are taxes or regulation imposed VI can avoid
them - on transactions?
- Do the different stages have similar Greater
the similarity, the - optimal scales of operation? more attractive is
VI - Are the two stages strategically Greater the
strategic - similar? similarity ---the more
attractive is VI - How great the need for entrepreneurship Greater
the need, the greater - continual upgrading of capabilities the
disadvantages of VI - How uncertain is market demand? Greater the
unpredictability - ----the more costly is VI
- Are risks compounded by VI increases risk.
- linkages between vertical stages
10The value chain for steel cans
Canning of food, drink, oil, etc.
Iron ore mining
Steel production
Steel strip production
Can making
VERTICAL INTEGRATION, AND MARKET CONTRACTS
VERTICAL INTEGRATION
MARKET CONTRACTS
MARKET CONTRACTS
What factors explain why some stages are
vertically integrated, while others are linked by
market transactions?
11Designing Vertical Relationships Long-Term
Contracts and Quasi-Vertical Integration
- Intermediate between spot transactions and
vertical integration are several types of
vertical relationships - ---such relationships may combine benefits of
both market transactions and internalization - Key issues in designing vertical relationships
- -- How is risk allocated between the parties?
- -- Are the incentives appropriate?
12Recent Trends in Vertical Relationships
- From competitive contracting to supplier
partnerships, e.g. in autos - From vertical integration to outsourcing (not
just components, also IT, distribution, and
administrative services). - Diffusion of franchising
- Technology partnerships (e.g. IBM- Apple Canon-
HP) - Inter-firm networks
- General conclusion- boundaries between firms
and markets becoming increasingly blurred.
13Different Types of Vertical Relationship
Low
Long-term contracts
Franchises
Joint ventures
Agency agreements
Spot sales/ purchases
Low Formalization High
Supplier/ customer partnerships
Informal supplier/ customer relationships
Vertical integration
Low Degree of Commitment High