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Clark University Logistics ProjectOrganizational Dynamics of the U.S. Logistics Industry: The Impacts of Inter-firm Relations, Technologies, and Globalization
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Welcome to Clark University Logistics Project Web site. This research project is funded by the National Science Foundation(BCS-0350697)
and is directed by Professors Yuko Aoyama and Samuel J. Ratick at Clark University. Institutional support is provided by the George Perkins Marsh Research Institute.
PROJECT ABSTRACT
Although the logistics
industry provides critical services to all sectors of the economy, few studies
exist in Economic Geography that attempt to understand the organizational
dynamics of this industry. The aim of this research is to understand the
organizational dynamics of the logistics industry. We will focus on the
following dimensions that are identified as particularly important: use of
information technologies, intensifying global trade, and changing geographic
requirements. We combine an in-depth empirical survey, comprised of a nationwide
mail-in survey and semi-structured interviews of logistics users and providers
in the Boston-Washington corridor, with an exploratory use of agent-based
modeling. The model is designed to push
the research beyond collection of anecdotal evidence and offer a structured and
systematic understanding of organizational dynamics of the logistics industry.
The study will enrich
understanding of the interaction between technology and space through examining
the evolution of an industry that plays a central role in the contemporary
economy. Research results will provide little known aspects of the logistics
industry’s emerging organizational dynamics and inform academics and policy
makers on the theoretical and practical understandings of the long-distance
coordination of production.
INTERVIEWS
Purpose of the Interviews The empirical research is designed to gather information on
the agents’ properties, and on the forms of market governance in which firms
operate. Our empirical study centers on the U.S. logistics industry, but also
includes participation in international trade and provision of related logistics
services by incorporating global connections that must be managed by the agents
and also influence the forms of market governance.
We developed a geographically tiered sampling design that
includes:
- a nationwide mail-in survey of logistics providers,
- telephone interviews of a sample of 50 logistics providers from the survey for additional
details,
- in-person, semi-structured interviews of 30 logistics providers in
the Boston-Washington corridor,
- in-person, semi-structured interviews of 20
logistics users which are subsidiaries of foreign firms in the Boston-Washington
corridor, and
- in-person, semi-structured interviews of 30 logistics users in
Massachusetts.
Interviews of Logisticsprovidersandusersin Boston-Washington Corridor We plan to conduct
semi-structured, in-person interviews of 50 logisticsusers, 30 domestic
firms and 20 foreign firms in Boston-Washington corridor, which consists of the
following nine Consolidated Metropolitan Statistical Areas (CMSA) and
Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSA):
- Boston-Worcester-Lawrence CMSA
- Providence-Fall River-Warwick MSA
- Springfield MSA Hartford MSA
- New London-Norwich MSA
- New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island CMSA
- Philadelphia-Wilmington-Atlantic City CMSA
- Dover MSA
- Washington-Baltimore CMSA
The Boston-Washington metropolitan corridor has been chosen
as an area of research for its significant concentration of manufacturing
activities and its function as an important domestic as well as international
logistics center.
We will conduct 30 interviews from a random sample of logisticsproviderslocated in Boston-Washington corridor, generated from a variety of industry
lists from various firms, associations, and internet Web sites and stratified by
firm type according to the taxonomy and agent properties. Questions will be asked on their
- strategic decisions (e.g., entry/exit of new service, IT use/investment,
sub-contractor selection/retention),
- decision-making process and experience (e.g., criteria considered in recent strategic decisions, post-decision
monitoring of objectives), and
- industry trends (e.g., use of short-term
vs. long term contracts, use of lowest-bidder vs. quality-trust subcontractors,
competitive pressures, path-dependency, location-inertia).
An additional 20 foreign firms will be selected in the
Boston-Washington corridor to address the impact of increased global trade in
the logistics industry and address the complexities of cross-border logistics
operation. We will focus on firms from Germany and Japan to exploit expertise
and linguistic backgrounds of our research team. In spite of the recent economic
downturns, both Japanese and German economies are strong global manufacturers
and important trading partners to the U.S. economy, competitive in the 3 chosen
industrial sectors (electronics, computers and medical devices), and operate
under different market governance principles, thus serve as comparable parallels
to our U.S. sample examples and provide insights to the complexities of
cross-border logistics.
Interview questions for both domestic and foreign logistics
users will be based on agent properties, and includes
- firm characteristics (location, location of customers, location of vendors, participation in
international trade, date of establishment, employment, annual revenue),
- logistics characteristics (location of providers, transportation mode used,
cost of outsourcing, types/duration of contracts, IT use and investments), and
- strategic decisions characteristics (e.g., bidding vs. other forms of
provider selection, criteria considered in recent decisions, outcomes).
Last updated on September 15, 2004
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