Type | Report |
Title | Trade Reform, Vertical Contracts and Innovation in a Developing Economy |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2006 |
Publisher | Centre for Studies in Social Sciences |
City | Calcutta |
Country/State | India |
URL | http://www.isid.ac.in/~planning/DibyenduMaiti.pdf |
Abstract | Recent ongoing literature focuses that technological development and globalization are transforming the internal organization of the firm and present study seeks to address this issue as an impact of trade reform in developing economy. It is interesting that a large part of producing activities in developing economies like India is undertaken by informal producers, mostly those who are vertically related to formal producers. Moreover, during the post-reform period in India vertical separation has increased by buyers giving more subcontracts to informal producers through mutually contractual relationships. How informal producers survive and what the economics of informal contracts are, is still under-researched. An upcoming trend of tying up of powerful downstream producers to small upstream intermediate producers is observed with informal assistance to upstream innovation efforts during the post-reform period. Trade reform policy in India enhances vertical separation in order to reduce the bureaucratic costs inside an integrated firm. If a powerful buyer transfers the burden of price cuts to the upstream firm, this invariably squeezes his own profit as a feedback, because of reduction of upstream innovation effort. When a power buyer assists upstream innovation, it not only helps upstream innovation effort, but also benefits surpluses for both supplier and buyer. |
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