Title: Economics of Strategy
1Economics of Strategy
Besanko, Dranove, Shanley and Schaefer, 3rd
Edition
Chapter 4 Organizing Vertical Boundaries Vertica
l Integration and its Alternatives
Slide show adapted on basis of that prepared by
Richard PonArul California State University,
Chico
? John Wiley ? Sons, Inc.
2Introduction
- There are various approaches in considering the
merits of vertical integration - balancing transactions costs (O. Williamson)
- role of asset ownership (S.Grossman, O.Hart,
J.Moore) - These two approaches generate also two different
theories of the firm - There are also alternatives to vertical
integration - tapered integration
- joint ventures
- networks
- implicit contracts
3Vertical Boundaries
- For each step in the vertical chain the firm has
to decide between market exchange and vertical
integration - The degree of vertical integration differs
- Across industries
- Across firms within an industry
- Across transactions with in firm
- We consider an upstream firm and a downstream
firm
4The Tradeoff in Vertical Integration
- Using the market improves technical efficiency
(least cost production) it
relates to production - Vertical integration improves agency efficiency
(coordination, transactions costs) it relates
to exchange - Firm should economize - choose the best
possible combination of technical and agency
efficiencies
5Technical Efficiency
- Using the market leads to higher technical
efficiency compared to vertical integration
(power of market discipline) - The difference in technical efficiency of market
over vertical integration (?T) depends on the
nature of the assets involved in production (ie.
production of the intermediate product by the
upstream firm)
6Technical Efficiency
- As the assets become more specialized the market
firms economies of scale become weaker - The difference in technical efficiency of market
over vertical integration (?T) declines with
greater asset specificity
7Agency Efficiency
- At high levels of asset specificity, differential
agency efficiency of market over vertical
integration (?A) is negative - When specialized assets are involved, potential
for a holdup is high and the result is higher
transactions costs
8Agency Efficiency
- At low levels of asset specificity, differential
agency efficiency of market over vertical
integration (?A) is likely to be positive - Without the holdup problem, market exchange could
be more agency efficient than in-house production
(due to intra-firm agency and influence costs).
9Efficiency Tradeoff
- The combined (market over vertical integration)
differential efficiency (?C) will be negatively
related to asset specificity - At high levels of assets specificity vertical
integration is more efficient - At low levels of assets specificity outsourcing
wins
10An illustration
If the input is purchased from an outside
supplier agency costs include negotiation,
writing and enforcing contracts
If the input is sourced internally agency
costs are the agency and influence costs
discussed before
Vertical integration is preferable when
economies of scale are weak and asset
specificity is high
k measures asset specificity
When the degree of asset specificity is low DA gt 0
DT gives the difference in minimum production
cost from internal versus external production
When the degree of asset specificity is greater
than k vertical integration is the preferred
mode
When the degree of asset specificity is less
than k market exchange is the preferred mode
When the degree of asset specificity is high DA
lt 0
DA gives the difference in agency costs from
internal versus external production
DT
k
k
k
DC is the vertical sum of DT and DA. It is the
difference between production and exchange costs
with vertical integration and these costs with
market exchange
When the degree of asset specificity is less
than k market exchange has lower transactions
costs
DC
DA
11Technical and Agency Efficiency
12Efficiency Tradeoff and Scale
- When the scale of production of the downstream
firm increases, the vertically integrated firm
enjoys better economies of scale - With increased scale, the differential technical
efficiency decreases for every level of asset
specificity (the ?T curve shifts downward)
13Efficiency Tradeoff and Scale
- With an increase in scale, the differential
agency efficiency becomes more sensitive to asset
specificity - Differential agency efficiency (market over
vertical integration) will increase with scale
for low asset specificity - With high asset specificity, differential agency
efficiency decreases with scale - ? ?A curve twists clockwise through point k
14Efficiency Tradeoff and Scale
- The combined differential efficiency (?C) sharply
declines for low asset specificity - ? ?C curves shifts downward and becomes less
steep - The degree of asset specificity at which market
is just competitive with vertical integration
declines (from k to k) - Vertical integration is preferred to market
exchange over a larger range of asset specificity
15The illustration (cont.)
An increase in market size reduces the critical
degree of asset specificity above which vertical
integration is preferred
Now consider the impact of market growth on the
internal/external choice
An increase in market size causes DT to fall
k
An increase in market size accentuates the
advantage of the mode of production with lower
exchange costs and so twists DA around k
DT
k
k
k
The overall effect is to change DC and move k
to the left to k
DC
DA
16Vertical integration (cont.)
- Three important conclusions
- Scale and scope economies at intermediate input
level - gain less from vertical integration when scale
and scope economies are strong - Product market scale and growth
- gain more from vertical integration in large and
growing markets - Asset specificity
- gain more from vertical integration when
production involves investment in
relationship-specific assets
17Real-World Evidence
- GM is more vertically integrated than Ford is,
for the same asset specificity (scale) - In aerospace, greater design specificity
increases the likelihood of vertical integration
of production - Among utilities, mine-mouth plants are more
likely to be integrated compared with other plants
18The Virtual Corporation (Davidow-Malone, 1992)
- Advances in technology have reduced coordination
costs and reduced asset specificity - Consequently, the advantage of market over
vertical integration has steadily increased - Virtual corporation is the limit when each
element in the vertical chain will be independent
19Vertical Integration and Asset Ownership
- Grossman-Hart-Moore (GHM) adopt a different
approach to study vertical integration - Make-or-buy decision is essentially a decision
regarding ownership rights if right of use is
granted the owner retains residual rights of
control (i.e.. Rights of control on what is not
explicitly stipulated on the contract) - cont.
20Vertical Integration and Asset Ownership
- If contracts were complete, it will not matter
who owned the assets in the vertical chain - With incomplete contracts, ownership pattern
determines the willingness of each party to make
relationship-specific investments
21Vertical Integration and Asset Ownership
- Three ways to organize a transaction in the
vertical chain - The two units are independent (non integration)
- Upstream unit owns the assets of the downstream
unit (forward integration) - Downstream unit owns the assets of the upstream
unit (backward integration)
22Asset Ownership and Integration
- Possession of residual control improves
bargaining power over operating decision - The form of integration affects the incentives to
invest in relationship-specific assets - Whether vertical integration is optimal or not
depends on the relative contribution to value
added by each partys investment
23Asset Ownership and Integration
- If the investments by the upstream player and the
downstream player are of comparable importance,
market exchange is preferred - If the investment by one player is more important
in value creation, vertical integration is
preferred
24Asset Ownership and Integration
- Asset ownership is an important dimension of
vertical integration - There could be degrees of integration depending
on the extent of control over specialized assets - Example Auto manufacturers can use independent
suppliers for body parts but own the dies and
stamping machines
25Vertical Integration in Insurance Industry
- In whole life insurance, sales agents efforts in
renewal are unimportant and insurers tend to use
in-house sales forces and tend to own client
lists - In term life insurance, renewal efforts are more
important and independent agents who own client
lists are used
26Human Assets and Vertical Integration
- When physical assets are involved, upstream (or
downstream) asset ownership can be used along
with market exchange - When human assets are important, acquiring
control of these assets can be done only through
a full fledged vertical integration
27Process Issues in Vertical Mergers
- The desirability of a vertical merger is affected
by its impact on technical and agency efficiency - It is also affected by governance issues
- managers of the acquired unit have to cede
control post-merger - but they must be given decision-making power
commensurate with their control over specialized
resources e.g. human capital - decision-making rights should be given to
managers with the greatest influence in
performance and profitability - if success depends on synergies associated with
physical assets, centralize - if success depends on specialized knowledge of
acquired managers, decentralize
28Process issues (cont.)
- The governance structure that emerges may well
exhibit path dependence - past circumstances determine governance structure
- immediate post-merger conflict undermines the
potential for future cooperation - affects relationship between parent and a
spun-off unit - may maintain long-term informal association
- affects capacity to sell outside the vertically
integrated unit - internal division does not usually have this
expertise the external market is a distraction - an acquired supplier does have this expertise it
had marketing capacity prior to acquisition
29Alternatives to Vertical Integration
- Tapered integration (making some and buying the
rest) - Joint ventures and strategic alliances
- Long term collaborative relationships
- Implicit contracts between firms
30Tapered Integration
- A firm may produce part of its input on its own
and purchase the rest - A firm may sell part of its output through
in-house sales efforts and sell the rest through
independent distributors
31Tapered Integration Advantages
- Additional input/output channels without massive
capital investments - Information about costs and profitability from
internal operations can help in negotiating with
market firms (threat of self manufacture can
discipline external channels) and external
supplier can be a yardstick to control internal
division. - Internal supply capabilities will protect against
potential holdups
32Tapered Integration Disadvantages
- Possible loss of economies of scale
- Coordination may become more difficult since the
two production units must agree on product
specifications and delivery times - Managers may be self-serving in continuing with
internal production well after it has become
inefficient to do so
33Tapered Integration in Gasoline Retailing
- Major oil refiners sell through their own service
stations and through independently owned stations - As gas stations have moved away from auto repair
and maintenance services, the proportion of
company owned stations are growing
34Strategic Alliances and Joint Ventures
- Alliances involve cooperation, coordination and
information sharing for a joint project while the
participating firms continue to be independent - A joint venture is an alliance where a new
independent organization is created and jointly
owned by the promoting firms
35Strategic Alliance
- Alliances and joint ventures are intermediate
solutions, between market exchange and vertical
integration - Rather than rely on contracts, an alliance relies
on trust and reciprocity - Disputes are rarely litigated but resolves
through negotiation
36Strategic Alliance Advantages
- Transactions that are natural candidates for
alliances have compelling reasons to both make
and buy - Uncertainty surrounding future activities
prevents the parties from going into the
specifics of those decisions in a contract - Transactions are complex and one cannot count on
contract law to fill the gaps - Existence of relationship-specific assets and
potential holdup problem
37Strategic Alliance - Advantages
- Any one party does not have the expertise to
organize the transaction internally - Market opportunity that induced the transaction
is not expected to last very long making a long
term contract or merger unattractive - Regulatory environment necessitates acquiring a
local partner for the venture
38Strategic Alliance - Costs
- There are drawbacks
- risk of leakage of information and loss of
control of proprietary information - the alliance usually requires extensive
information sharing between independent firms - efficient coordination may be difficult to
achieve - no formal mechanism for resolving disputes
- suffers from agency and influence costs
- effort split across independent firms
- potential free-rider problem neither party has
the incentive to monitor effectively because they
not not keep all the benefits
39Collaborative Relationships
- Japanese industrial firms appear to be smaller
and less vertically integrated compared to their
western counterparts - Japanese firms organize the vertical chain using
long term collaborative relationship among firms
rather than arms length transactions
40Collaborative Relationships
- Two major types of collaborative relationships
are found in Japan - Subcontractor networks
- Keiretsu
41Subcontractor Networks
- Japanese manufacturers maintain close, informal,
long term relationship with their network of
subcontractors - The typical relationship between a manufacturer
and a subcontractor involves far more asset
specificity in Japan than in the West - Example, UK vs Japan in electronics
- short-term, narrowly defined
- mediated by contractual rather than informal
arrangements
42Keiretsu
- Member firms of a keiretsu hold each others
equity - Links among firms are further strengthened by
personal relationships among top executives - Most of the key activities in the vertical chain
are performed by members of the keiretsu with
easy coordination and no chance for holdups
43Keiretsu
Formal, institutionalized relationship with
complex linkages
Other financial institutions
Life insurance companies
Banks
Loans
Trading Companies
Manufg Companies
Equity holdings
Trade
Satellite Companies
44Implicit Contracts
- Implicit contracts are unstated understanding
between firms in a business relationship - Longstanding relationship between firms can make
them behave cooperatively towards each other
without any formal contracts
45Implicit Contracts
- The threat of losing future business (and the
future stream of profits) is enough to deter
opportunistic behavior in any one period - The desire to protect ones reputation in the
market place can be another mechanism that makes
implicit contracts viable
46An illustration
Should commitment be reduced?
Upstream Supplier
Downstream Firm
Final Consumers
Stick with the implicit contract so long as r lt
50
Profit p.a. 1 million
Profit p.a. 1 million
Both parties have alternative trading partners
with profits of 900,000 p.a. if forced to switch
Gain one-off increase of 200,000
Both parties can increase profits to 1.2 million
by reducing commitment to the relationship
Loss long-term loss of 100,000 from collapse of
relationship
Present value of loss 100,000/r