1 / 20

Networking, Innovation and Agglomeration in the Irish Furniture Manufacturing Industry

Networking, Innovation and Agglomeration in the Irish Furniture Manufacturing Industry. Kevin Heanue. Overview. Background & Rationale Methodology Findings Conclusions & Recommendations. Background & rationale (1). PhD research: series of 4 papers Why the furniture industry?

abie
Download Presentation

Networking, Innovation and Agglomeration in the Irish Furniture Manufacturing Industry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Networking, Innovation and Agglomeration in the Irish Furniture ManufacturingIndustry Kevin Heanue

  2. Overview • Background & Rationale • Methodology • Findings • Conclusions & Recommendations

  3. Background & rationale (1) • PhD research: series of 4 papers • Why the furniture industry? • ‘High-tech’ policy obsession • Resilient • Dispersed

  4. Background & rationale (2) • Context • Supplier-dominated (Pavitt, 1984) • Mature; price sensitive, labour-intensive yet quality conscious in some sectors • NIC competition yet, paradoxically, European manufacturers world leaders

  5. Background & rationale (3) • Concepts and theory • Post Fordism (Piore and Sable,1984; Best, 1990) • Innovation studies (Pavitt, 1984; Lundvall, 1988; 1992) • Location (Krugman, 1991; Becattini 1990) • Trust (Cooke & Morgan, 1998) embeddedness (Granovetter, 1973; 1985); proximity (Boschma, 2005)

  6. Background & rationale (4) • Policy • Networking – Forbairt Pilot Inter-firm Co-operation Programme (1996); EI Industry-Led Networks Initiative (2006) • Innovation – STIAC (1995); Strategy for Science, Technology and Innovation (2006) • Agglomeration/clustering/networking - Culliton Report (1992); Ahead of the Curve (2004)

  7. Methodology (1) • Industrial economics – firm behaviour; industrial organisation and industry structure • Heterodox approach – eclectic use of theoretical and conceptual perspectives and also variety of methodologies (Lawson, 2006) • Primarily case-study based, but also statistical analysis • Pragmatic realism

  8. Methodology (2) • Why case studies? • ‘How’ and ‘why’ questions • Context dependent • Contemporary phenomenon • No control over behavioural events • Papers presented as produced , i.e. chronologically

  9. Findings – Networking (1) • Why would geographically dispersed competitors with no history of personal relations initially decide to come together, be willing to share sensitive commercial information and begin to engage in co-operative projects? • Methodology: Case study of TORC horizontal network of 3 furniture firms (firms, Enterprise Ireland Network Programme, Network Manager). • Focus on network formation: Trust – transaction and agency costs

  10. Findings – Networking (2) • Need for cooperation among furniture manufacturers (CIO, 1964 → NESC, 1996) • Differentiates between formation of ascribed trust between firms that are and are not spatially proximate • Organisational proximity as opposed to spatial proximity identified as alternative context within which ascribed trust can develop even in the absence of direct interaction

  11. Findings – Networking (3) • Contribution to the theoretical understanding of network formation • Raises questions about support for individual companies in industrial agglomerations • Evidence of organisational integration (Lazonick, 1991; Lazonick and West, 1995) in contrast to agglomerated firms

  12. Findings – Innovation (1) • What role does location play in the innovation processes of low- and medium-technology firms? • Methodology: Case studies of four firms – furniture (x2) and fabricated metal products (x2) – all rural locations • Relationship between embeddedness and innovation. Is deep, local, embeddedness important for innovation? Inverted u shape? Does the relationship change over time?

  13. Findings – Innovation (2) • First – identify innovation processes of case study firms • Type of network relationships • Interactive learning processes • Variety and sources of knowledge bases • Location is becoming a less important driver of innovation for these furniture firms (not so for the Fab Metal firms) • Wide variety of relationships between embeddedness and innovation is possible

  14. Findings – Innovation (3) • Mixture of: • Local and non-local linkages • Market and non-market relationships • Formal and informal networks • Support (from furniture) for critics of simplistic arguments about clustering (e.g. Uzzi, 1997; Boschma, 2005; Maskell et al. 2006) but contradiction from Fab Metal.

  15. Findings – Agglomeration (1) • Cost-reducing and/or innovation-promotion benefits • Furniture manufacturing – Denmark; Italy etc • Localised concentrations identified for Ireland – Dublin, Cork, Meath, Monaghan – but never formally tested • Scepticism about agglomerative benefits in Irish furniture industry (Heanue & Jacobson, 2005; 2008)

  16. Findings – Agglomeration (2) • Is there evidence of industrial agglomeration (and therefore agglomeration economies) in the Irish furniture industry? • Ireland generally – dispersal – agglomeration - dispersal since 1920s (Strobl, 2004) • Methodology – Standardised Location Quotients (O’Donoghue & Gleave, 2004)

  17. Findings – Agglomeration (3)

  18. Conclusions & recommendations (1) • Theory • Existence and complexity of innovation in LMT sectors • Relationship between location and innovation for LMT sectors is heterogeneous both within and among sectors • Spatial limits to industrial agglomeration more ‘stretched’ than conventionally viewed • Literature on ascribed trust outside of geography

  19. Conclusions & recommendations (2) • Policy • Cluster promotion may not be the best strategy • Encouragement of networks and linkages • Complex variety of policies necessary • Positive impacts of policies might take a long time – gestation period for TORC at least 10 years • Policy towards LMT innovation

  20. Thanks

More Related