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The Electronics Industries springboard: transistor 1948 significance: provider of components
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Electronic Production System Dicken’s focus
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Global trends Active components production was initially dominated by USA 1980s: Japan overtook USA 1990s: U.S. producers have rebounded
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World production of active components, 1996 26% 11% 37% 9%
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Trade balances in active components, 1994, $billions *Hong Kong, Taiwan, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore
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World production of consumer electronics more dispersed role of East and SE Asian NIEs is more pronounced
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World production Consumer electronics
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Trade balances in consumer electronics, $billions
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The demand factor-semiconductors Demand is derived. Depends on demand growth for products in which they are embedded spectacular demand growth. Significance of personal computer role of spectacular price decline subject to fluctuation---> supply gluts and shortages segmentation of demand
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The demand factor--consumer electronics Final demand products for which demand is income-elastic demand depends on life-cycle stage
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Role of governments-- semiconductors Rationale for intervention??? How to gain access? –Build indigenous production capacity –attract foreign firms –buy on open market and concentrate on developing end uses
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U.S. –initially used defense/aerospace demand to develop indigenous production –more recently has shifted to reducing Japanese dumping Japan –encourage growth of industrial & consumer applications –protect domestic industry –coordinate collaborative efforts Europe--collaborative efforts
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Role of governments--consumer electronics Primarily defensive in response to import penetration
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Production Costs, Technological Change & Corporate Strategies --semiconductors--
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I. Industrial concentration trends Initially fragmented. Entry was relatively easy Steep recent increases in cost of entry due to pressures to: –pack more circuits on a single chip –improve yields result is industrial concentration
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II. Trends in producer types Vertically integrated captive producers- manufacture for in-house use. IBM, GM merchant producers. For sale to other firms. Intel, Motorola hybrids. Most Japanese and European producers trend is toward greater vertical integration
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III. Mergers and acquisitions 1970s and 1980s followed by international strategic alliances Why? Rapid pace of technological change & high costs of installing new capacity.
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IV. Multiple stages to production process Design of semiconductors Prod’n of silicon crystal Wafer fabrication Testing Assembly & packaging Final testing & shipping Requirements for scientific, technical & engineering personnel Requirements for cheap, low-skilled labor
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Result: Offshore production Which stages? those most attracted by cheap labor. American firms pioneered. Hong Kong 1962. Japanese firms accelerate offshoring in 1980s. Why? Appreciation of value of yen.
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Changing structure of East and SE Asian production Semiconductor Imports into the U.S. 1. Geographic changes
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Factors Labor cost increases in South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore Gov’t policy changes in Malaysia and Philippines
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2. Emergence of higher skill stages of production--factors Hong Kong--wafer fabrication with Chinese support Korea--backward integration of consumer electronics producers Taiwan--gov’t sponsored research organization U.S. plants add functions like testing with more local sales
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Result--hierarchical organization within the region
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