The governance of global value chains
Indexed incrossref
Abstract
Abstract This article builds a theoretical framework to help explain governance patterns in global value chains. It draws on three streams of literature – transaction costs economics, production networks, and technological capability and firm-level learning – to identify three variables that play a large role in determining how global value chains are governed and change. These are: (1) the complexity of transactions, (2) the ability to codify transactions, and (3) the capabilities in the supply-base. The theory generates five types of global value chain governance – hierarchy, captive, relational, modular, and market – which range from high to low levels of explicit coordination and power asymmetry. The…
Citation impact
6,606
total citations
- FWCI
- 308.82
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 67
Citations per year
Authors
3Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Industrial organization
- Corporate governance
- Global value chain
- Transaction cost
- Supply chain
- Database transaction
- Value (mathematics)
- Modular design
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Industry, innovation and infrastructure
No related works found for this paper.