Los puntos clave no están disponibles para este artículo en este momento.
Global supply chains literally make the world go around. There is constant attention given to global supply chain issues in the popular press, whether the topic is supply disruption, transparency, or social responsibility. There is growing recognition that the relatively young area of supply chain management research still has much to gain from incorporating the perspectives of other disciplines into our research. Embracing the opportunities to incorporate the viewpoints and theories of other disciplines into supply chain research is one of the objectives of the Journal of Supply Chain Management. This was demonstrated in Maltz's (2012) editorial and hosted discussion forum on global supply chains. It incorporated the perspectives of economics, from a trade facilitation policy standpoint (Mann, 2012), geography and regional structures (Rodrigue, 2012), and global value chain analysis, which is grounded in the economics and governance literature (Gereffi Casson, 2013; Casson Dunning, 1988; Ellram, Tate & Petersen, 2013). Two essays in this issue examine the internalization perspective: Casson's (2013) “Economic analysis of international supply chains: An internalization perspective” and Ellram et al. (2013) “Offshoring and reshoring: An update on the manufacturing location decision.” Casson provides some background on the relevance of economics and internalization theory in particular to better understanding the supply chain. Internalization theory takes a macro perspective, considering industry-level issues and examining the strategic questions of where the facility is located, who owns the product, and who employs the productive labor (Casson, 2013). These also interplay with the issue of foreign direct investment. Casson (2013) suggests that internalization theory can be used to explain both the rise of offshoring and its reversal, reshoring. Ellram et al.'s (2013) essay takes a narrower view of applying internalization theory to the location decision. Using empirical survey data, this paper applies the location aspect of internalization theory to provide an understanding of what factors affect organizations' perceptions of the attractiveness of various regions as locations for owned manufacturing facilities. They conclude that organizations are beginning to look at their manufacturing location decisions from a broader lens than simply cost, giving more weight to supply chain issues as well as strategic factors. Combining economics and strategy, McIvor's (2013) essay, “Understanding the manufacturing location decision: The case for the transaction cost and capability perspectives,” examines the similarities and differences between two theories that have been popular in SCM research: resource-based view and transaction cost economics. These theories have been applied to the outsourcing decision in the supply chain literature and elsewhere, but not as much to the manufacturing location decision. McIvor suggests that these theories can also be applied to the outsourced manufacturing location decision to help organizations reduce the risk of opportunism, when an organization decides that it should outsource. Issues such as cultural variables, property rights and protection, and supplier relationships can be viewed through these lenses when comparing among various offshore locations. This conclusion was reinforced by Ellram et al. (2013), in their findings that supply chain characteristics take on different levels of importance in different regions. Finally, Gray et al. (2013) provide a framework for pushing the research on manufacturing location decisions forward, from a supply chain perspective. First, they provide clear definitions of various terms such as reshoring, from which constructs can be built and clear future research streams developed. They also provide a review of the literature in a number of different areas that have framed the manufacturing location decision. Finally, they lay the ground for theory development and future research through the development of five assertions. These assertions consider the relationship between reshoring and the location decision, between offshoring and reshoring, problems with the way that the location decision is made, environmental implications of the manufacturing location decision, and the temporal nature of the location decision, including the purported trend toward reshoring. The editors hope that you find the essays and comment related to this timely topic useful. It is often noted that academic research tends to lag practice and report on past events, rather than push the boundaries of knowledge forward. This set of essays is an effort to help push the boundaries of SCM research and encourage researchers to embrace current, real-world issues as well as the perspectives of other disciplines.
Lisa M. Ellram (Mon,) studied this question.