New Emerging Industries and Alternative Pathways into Global Value Chains: the Case of Estonian Automated Mobility and Delivery Industry

被引:1
|
作者
Juuse, Egert [1 ]
Karo, Erkki [1 ]
机构
[1] Tallinn Univ Technol, Ragnar Nurkse Dept Innovat & Governance, Akad Tee 3, EE-12618 Tallinn, Estonia
关键词
Global value chains; Upgrading; Start-ups; Automated mobility and delivery industry; Estonia; DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; PRODUCTION NETWORKS; CATCH-UP; TECHNOLOGY;
D O I
10.1007/s13132-024-02236-w
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
Global value chains (GVC) framework provides an analytical tool to unravel development and upgrading trajectories for businesses from catching-up economies. At the same time, the catching-up literature tends to portray the upgrading in emerging economies as a gradual and linear process. Considering the digital transformation-driven trends in global value chains (GVCs) and the rise of new emerging industries, we show how small start-ups from catching-up economies can redefine the traditional pathways for entering and upgrading in GVCs. Based on three cases from the automated mobility and delivery industry in Estonia, we show how small start-up companies can achieve rapid global outreach not only via functional but also product-related, inter-sectoral, and end-market upgrading by specializing in novel niche value propositions and by building business models around digital platforms to reap the benefits from the network effects. As a result, the analysed companies have not faced established and occupied value chains, where latecomer manufacturers tend to enter, but have managed to shape and control their value chains by directing the developments on local as well as international levels, and paradoxically, without much policy support.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 31 条
  • [1] Global Value Chains: The Case of the Software Industry in Poland
    Micek, Grzegorz
    How to Benefit from Global Value Chains - Implications for the V4 Countries, 2015, : 98 - 115
  • [2] Developing local industries and global value chains: The case of offshore wind
    van der Loos, Adriaan
    Langeveld, Rowan
    Hekkert, Marko
    Negro, Simona
    Truffer, Bernhard
    Technological Forecasting and Social Change, 2022, 174
  • [3] Developing local industries and global value chains: The case of offshore wind
    van der Loos, Adriaan
    Langeveld, Rowan
    Hekkert, Marko
    Negro, Simona
    Truffer, Bernhard
    TECHNOLOGICAL FORECASTING AND SOCIAL CHANGE, 2022, 174
  • [4] Labour standards and regulation in global value chains: The case of the New Zealand Fishing Industry
    Stringer, Christina
    Hughes, Steve
    Whittaker, D. Hugh
    Haworth, Nigel
    Simmons, Glenn
    ENVIRONMENT AND PLANNING A-ECONOMY AND SPACE, 2016, 48 (10): : 1910 - 1927
  • [5] The Brazilian industry and the global value chains: an analysis on the basis of aeronautical, medical devices and electronics industries
    Marcato, Marilia Bassetti
    REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE INOVACAO, 2016, 15 (02): : 393 - 396
  • [6] Emerging Trends in Factory Asia: International Capital Mobility, Global Value Chains and the Emerging Labour Movement in Asia
    Bose, Annavajhula J. C.
    CHINA REPORT, 2015, 51 (04) : 341 - 344
  • [7] LAW, GLOBAL VALUE CHAINS AND UPGRADING IN THE MINING INDUSTRY: A CASE STUDY ON ZAMBIA
    Ruppert, Ndinawe Mtonga
    Sobel-Read, Kevin
    Pepper, Blake
    AFRICAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AND COMPARATIVE LAW, 2021, 29 (04) : 521 - 550
  • [8] Semi-periphery and global value chains: The case of food industry in Mexico
    Cairo-I-Cespedes, Gemma
    Cortes Torres, Ivan
    TRIMESTRE ECONOMICO, 2022, 89 (355): : 795 - 828
  • [9] Alternatives for industrial upgrading in global value chains: The case of the plastics industry in Brazil
    Fleury, A
    Fleury, MT
    IDS BULLETIN-INSTITUTE OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, 2001, 32 (03): : 116 - +
  • [10] Are multinationals and governments from emerging economies configuring global value chains in new ways?
    Alvstam, Claes
    Ivarsson, Inge
    Petersen, Bent
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF EMERGING MARKETS, 2019, 15 (01) : 111 - 130