4.7. Vertical integration Flashcards
Define vertical integration
The degree to which a firm owns its upstream suppliers (backward integration) and downstream buyers (forward integration)
Forms of vertical integration
- Forward: Integration of distribution (retailers etc.)
- Backward: Integration of input provision
- Balanced: Includes production and distribution
What do transaction costs include?
- Search costs (finding inputs)
- Negotiation costs (relationship costs, not necessarily the actual cost - money)
- Opportunism of market agents
What do coordination costs include?
- Large groups
- Different interests
- Different processes (hand off)
- Information flows
Why do firms choose to vertically integrate?
Transaction cost theory:
internal production costs + internal coordination costs (costs related to the management functions) < purchasing costs + external transaction costs (costs associated with the management of the transaction)
Industry variations
• Some industries have historically been characterized by high degree of vertical integration
• However, in the same industry competitors may vary considerably in their degree of vertical integration
– Benetton produces internally almost all the phases
– Calvin Klein manages the brand but the production is outsourced
– Armani is in between
Advantages of vertical integration
• Strategic threat to suppliers/customers (remember the 5 Forces Model)
– You no longer have transaction costs associated with that specific transaction
• Better control on product quality and scheduling (Alibaba vs. Amazon?) - encourages joint research and development into improved quality of supplies of components
• Able to control the promotion and pricing of its own product
• Easier to build barriers to entry (minimize competitors’ access to market)
Disadvantages of vertical integration
- Costly
- Low flexibility (firm is locked into certain products and technologies) - demand has to be stable or else fixed costs might be too high, low utilization rate
- There may be government regulation (”anti-trust”) prohibiting vertical integration in different areas
- Lack of competition means the consumers have less choice => prices are higher => may react negatively (forward)
- Lack of experience
Vertical integration - American Gangster
- control the whole value chain of heroin in the 1970’s in particular in NYC
- important considerations:
+ search/negotiation costs are high
+ opportunism of market agents (especially since it’s illegal)
+ difficulty of writing contracts
+ importance of barriers to entry
=> makes sense to vertically integrate
Vertical integration - Apple
• To put together the iphone, Apple decided to own each step of the value chain….and build capabilities “organically”
Special case: no better strategies/solutions because problems are rooted from the supplier side
Takeaway:
• Anticipating coordination costs or even production
costs is almost impossible
– Transaction cost argument useful as guideline but decisions often made based on need/preference
– Given the new technology involved here, would it have been easier to buy from the market? Search costs?
Influences on vertical integration decisions
– Economic convenience
– Strategic importance of an input
– Market forces(do suppliers exert a lot of power right now?)
– Stability of the industry (if it will change fast you don’t want to be stuck owning too much outdated technology)
– Regulation (e.g. anti trust laws that break vertical chains).