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Title: Doing Business in Europe: Risk, Regulation and Quality


1
Doing Business in EuropeRisk, Regulation and
Quality
  • Dr Charles Dannreuther
  • POLIS, University of Leeds
  • ipicd_at_leeds.ac.uk

2
Overview
  • Part one the modern firm and national
    capitalisms
  • Part two the post modern firm and global
    capitalism
  • Competitiveness and quality based competition
  • Conclusions

3
The business of uncertainty
  • A firm is likely therefore to emerge in those
    cases where a very short term contract would be
    unsatisfactory. It seems improbable that a firm
    would emerge without the existence of
    uncertainty. (Coase, 1937, p. 337338)
  • Transaction Cost Economics TCE
  • Hierarchy when high market-based transaction
    costs due to
  • bounded rationality, opportunism and asset
    specicity

4
critiques
  • Bounded rationality
  • Optimising does not mean uncertain
  • Ergodic critique of Dunn 2000
  • Assumes that the future is the statistical
    reflection of the past history? agency?
  • Economic action is socially embedded
  • Varieties of capitalism exist
  • Radical change not included
  • What happens when things go really wrong?

5
Risk versus uncertainty
  • Frank Knight Risk, Uncertainty and Profit
  • Risk versus Uncertainty
  • Homogenous groupings risk
  • Heterogeneity uncertainty
  • Organise specialists into hierarchies
  • Compute with modern statistical techniques
  • Boundaries, hierarchies and knowledge

6
There are crises and there are CRISES
  • Regulation Theory
  • Why does capitalism prevail?
  • Stable periods of accumulation
  • Supported by social institutions of state,
    schools, welfare etc (modes of social regulation)
  • Help to manage crises by guaranteeing certain
    assumptions (eg health, wealth, property,
    security)
  • High growth period of post war Fordism
  • Periods of structural crisis
  • When core assumptions fail eg 1930s, 1970s, today?

7
Risk and the large firm
  • Risk?
  • Cyclical crises can be managed when groupings are
    homogenous
  • Predictable institutions evolve
  • Market risk EEC guarantees property rights for
    large companies, consumption is price not quality
    related
  • Labour risk get social benefits from national
    compromises
  • Political risk have authority from mass
    parties, bipolar international system and
    corporatist representations
  • National varieties of capitalism
  • States provide core rights of property, political
    representation and social welfare

8
Uncertainty and the large firm
  • Uncertainty?
  • When groupings become heterogeneous
  • Boundaries
  • National, social, and market boundaries dissolve
    with social change
  • Hierarchies
  • Single European Market harmonises standards to
    reduce non tariff barriers,
  • Regional economies and clusters out compete large
    economies
  • ICT implodes corporate hierarchies
  • Knowledge
  • Authority of technocrats challenged
  • Environment (Becks boomerang effect), BSE etc

9
C20th vs C21st Risk
C20th Century C21st Century Company responses
Boundaries Fixed and solid (national markets) Shifting and Porous (regional over national, culture over class, gender and workforce) Competitiveness in global markets and value chains for quality based competition
Hierarchies Vertical and authoritative (nation states and rule of law) Flat and discursive (subsidies and regulations replaced by benchmarks and good practice) Outsourcing, innovation and shareholder value
Knowledge Scientific and elite (eg universities and statistics) Scientific plus popular (popular debates and experience challenge academics) Market prevails, constant innovation to react to change Risk archipelagos
10
Risk under globalisation
  • Competitiveness and quality based competition
  • Quality brand and ISO
  • Flexible Labour Markets and skills agendas
  • Quality Employability
  • Financialisation and credit ratings
  • Quality Share holder value

11
Why Quality Standards Matter
  • Now, there is a prime consideration in the
    craft- gild stage that enhances the power of the
    merchant to shift his costs to the consumer. This
    is the fact that his market is a personal one and
    the consumer gives his order before the goods are
    made. On the other hand, the bargaining power of
    the merchant is menaced by the incapacity of
    customers accurately to judge of the quality of
    goods as against their capacity clearly to
    distinguish prices. Therefore, it is enough for
    the purposes of a protective organization in the
    custom-order stage of the industry to direct
    attention solely to the quality of the product
    rather than the price or the wage, and to seek
    only to exclude bad ware and the makers of bad
    ware.1
  • 1 See 44, John R. Commons 1909 American
    Shoemakers, 1648-1895 A Sketch of Industrial
    Evolution The Quarterly Journal of Economics,
    24, 1, pp. 39-84.

12
Case Study Emilia Romagna
  • Italian high growth in 1980s
  • From small industrial districts in Northern Italy
  • Flexible specialistion key
  • Specialist SMEs cooperating in loose chains to
    produce high quality high value products
  • Strong Municipal infrastructure
  • Strong cooperative tradition
  • Specialised in high quality
  • To supply Turin industry and international niches

13
Competitiveness and Quality competition
  • What is competitiveness?
  • competitive advantage through the processes used
    to add value
  • (not comparative advantage in factors of
    production)
  • Domestic conditions (consumers, suppliers)
    contribute to international competitiveness
  • Practical and observable solutions, rather than
    free market or mercantilist ideals
  • Innovation at the core (often driven by necessity)

14
Porters Diamond
  • Factor Conditions
  • Specialists help industries lead
  • Demand Conditions
  • Where domestic markets reveal buyer needs
  • Related and Supporting Industries
  • Internationally competitive home based suppliers
  • Firm Strategy, Structure and Rivalry
  • Domestic competition spurs innovation and
    improvements

15
The Competitiveness debate
  • Innovation at the core
  • National Innovation Systems
  • Globalisation and diversity
  • Beyond left and right
  • Competitive corporatism (eg Ireland)
  • The New Economy and competitiveness
  • Hi tech SMEs and high value
  • Value chain analysis
  • And share holder value

16
Company Responses to Competitiveness
  • Global Value Chains and Off shoring
  • http//www.globalvaluechains.org/
  • Markets (traditional exchange)
  • Modular value chains (stages)
  • Relational value chains (industrial districts)
  • Captive value chains (Toyotaism)
  • Hierarchy (corporation)
  • Coordination and benchmarks
  • The knowledge economy?

17
Global Brands
  • SMART cars and risk sharing
  • Productivity and marketing
  • Global brands the promise
  • Quality signal, global myth, and social
    responsibility
  • Different consumers
  • Global citizens, global dreamers,
    anti-globalists, agnostics
  • Local responses to global brands
  • Service sector growth
  • SME economy prevails (eg Service Directive)

18
Policy Responses to Competitiveness
  • Supranational
  • EU response to globalisation is the Lisbon Agenda
    to establish a competitive, sustainable and
    inclusive union
  • National
  • Competitiveness councils and regulatory reform
  • capabilities developed in National Reform
    Programmes
  • Regional
  • Local institutional strengthening and innovation
    clusters and SMEs

19
Competitiveness social agenda
  • Inclusion
  • to access variation in economy for innovation
  • Economic rights
  • that guarantee access to economy rather than
    payouts
  • Capabilities
  • that provide the mechanisms linking inclusion and
    competitiveness eg skills and VET

20
Key EU SME policies
  • SME Charter
  • Central element to EU Lisbon Agenda
  • Coordinates and publishes good practices for
    exchange
  • The SME Policy Index 2007 Process
  • Enterprise Action Plan
  • Based on large scale consultation through Green
    Paper
  • Specifies key goals and policies to achieve them
  • Enabling businesses
  • Think Small First of 2008 Small Business Act

21
SME Charter 2000-
  • 1 Education and training for entrepreneurship
  • at all levels of school, further and higher
    education
  • 2 Cheaper and faster start-up
  • simplifying the procedures to create a new firm
  • 3 Better legislation and regulation
  • assessing regulation for its impact on small
    firms, and where possible simplifying or removing
    altogether obligations on SMEs
  • 4 Availability of skills
  • ensuring training institutions orientate courses
    to train people in the skills needed by small
    enterprises
  • 5 Improving on-line access
  • reducing costs and making small firms dealings
    with government more efficient

22
SME Charter 2000-
  • 6 More out of the Single Market
  • continuing progress to remove barriers to trade
    and ensure fair competition in the internal
    market
  • 7 Taxation and financial matters
  • encouraging investment in small firms through
    ensuring tax and regulatory systems are
    favourable, and in particular that they reward
    success
  • 8 Strengthen the technological capacity of small
    enterprises,
  • ensuring that they are able to access and make
    use of any technology which could benefit their
    business
  • 9 Successful e-business models and top-class
    small business support
  • encouraging and enabling small enterprises to
    make the most of new opportunities in this areas
  • 10 Develop stronger, more effective
    representation of small enterprises interests at
    Union and national level,
  • ensuring that policy-makers are fully aware of
    the specific interests of small firms
  • Searchable Best practice database on SME Charter
  • http//ec.europa.eu/enterprise/enterprise_policy/c
    harter/gp/index.cfm?fuseactionpractice.list

23
Enterprise Action Program
  • Fuelling entrepreneurial mindsets
  • Promote entrepreneurship and Education
  • Encouraging more people to become entrepreneurs
  • Balance risk/reward address negatives of failure
    and social security, promote business transfers
    and new social enterprises
  • Gearing entrepreneurs for growth and
    competitiveness
  • Esp women and BMEs, internatioanlisation, access
    KBE and networks

24
Enterprise Action Program
  • Improving the flow of finance
  • Financial instruments, improve risk assessments,
    promote risk capital, business angels and venture
    capital
  • Creating a more SME-friendly regulatory and
    administrative framework
  • Good governance, RIAs, internal market and
    standardisation of rules, state aids etc

25
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26
Enterprise AP evaluation
  • Scored well against clearly defined goals
  • Check list mainly completed
  • Why so successful?
  • Brought a series of initiatives together into a
    coherent and integrated whole
  • Success through dialogue and voluntary
    commitments with Commission as a promoter and
    facilitator for ideas, acting as a catalyst for
    others
  • Practical measures illustrate how different
    actors working together to their mutual benefit
    on policy initiatives can deliver the goods.
  • Many techniques used to raise awareness including
    brochures, Commission communications on specific
    issues, and conferences and Euro Info Centres
  • Manageable goals

27
Risk under Globalisation
  • Boundaries are loose
  • ICT undermines geography
  • Added value selects from traditional distinctions
  • Knowledge is contested
  • Archipelagos of risk including social agendas
  • Evaluation and transparency are key
  • Hierarchies are consensual
  • Open and coordinating
  • Problem solving over regulating

28
Conclusions
  • Business environments change radically
  • Quality and competitiveness as responses to
    globalisation
  • Enabling of enterprise is central goal
  • Evaluation and benchmarks are key
  • Limits to the model?
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