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The Sustainability of Global Chain Governance: Network Structures and Local Supplier Upgrading in Thailand

doi: 10.3390/su8090915
Although it has been widely accepted that insertion into global production networks may play a critical role in fostering local supplier upgrading, scholars have yet to fully incorporate heterogeneous configurations of buyer-supplier relationships within networks into empirical testing. Using a representative sample of manufacturing firms in Thailand, we propose a more nuanced empirical framework that asks which features of buyer-supplier relationships are related to which aspects of local supplier upgrading. Our findings, derived from latent class analysis, show that the ways value chains are governed can exert varying effects on different types of technological upgrading. Being a multinational corporation (MNC) supplier was found to have positive effects on process and minor product upgrading, irrespective of the types of buyer-supplier networks. However, we found a more radical type of upgrading (i.e., the development of own brands) to be negatively related to insertion into ‘quasi-hierarchical’ or ‘buyer-driven relationships’, whilst involvement in ‘cooperative networks’ was associated with a significantly higher tendency of product and brand upgrading. Understanding this inherent relationality provides a crucial balance to previous firm-level findings, suggesting that the sustainability of participation in global value chains depends on the relational structures in which local manufacturers are embedded.
- Yonsei University Korea (Republic of)
- Korea Environment Institute Korea (Republic of)
- Yonsei University Korea (Republic of)
Environmental effects of industries and plants, technological upgrading, global production network, TJ807-830, TD194-195, Renewable energy sources, Environmental sciences, network structure, sustainable industrial development, latent class analysis, global production network; technological upgrading; network structure; sustainable industrial development; latent class analysis, GE1-350
Environmental effects of industries and plants, technological upgrading, global production network, TJ807-830, TD194-195, Renewable energy sources, Environmental sciences, network structure, sustainable industrial development, latent class analysis, global production network; technological upgrading; network structure; sustainable industrial development; latent class analysis, GE1-350
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