Michael E. Porter. The Competitive Advantage of Nations.
Mahmood, Zafar
Michael E. Porter. The Competitive Advantage of Nations. New York:
Free Press, 1990. 855 pages. Hardbound. UK 25 [pounds sterling].
Trade is a field of economics that is useful for investigating the
issue of economic competitiveness. A nation's advantages in
competing against other nations are reflected in its performance in
international economic transactions. Earlier theories on trade
(Ricardian and Heckscher-Ohlin) analysed a nation's inter-sectoral
comparative advantage. Due to the intuitive appeal of these theories,
governments have implemented various policies designed to improve
comparative advantage in factor costs by ,educing interest rates and
resorting to devaluation, special depreciation allowances, export
financing, etc. There is now a growing awareness that these theories are
unrealistic as to many industries, although they can be useful in
explaining broad tendencies apparent in the patterns of trade.
On the other hand, technology-gap and product-cycle models attempt
to explain absolute advantage based on cross-country variations in
technology--an important departure from the Heckscher-Ohlin world.
Absolute advantage refers to the absolute cost advantage of a nation
over another in producing a product. Trade occurs as a result of a
nation's owning an absolute advantage earned from its technological
lead over another.
The Competitive Advantage of Nations by Michael Porter addresses
some very important issues related to trade in goods and services: Why
do some nations succeed and others fail in international competition?
Why are firms based in a particular nation able to create and sustain
competitive advantage against the world's best competitors in a
particular field?
Porter expresses his strong conviction that a decisive national
economic environment allows firms to create and sustain competitive
advantage in particular fields, and hence in the competitive advantage
of nations. He emphasises that although much can be learned through an
economy-wide approach (which reflects national characteristics) to
understand the competitive success of a nation, yet the
industry-specific circumstances, choices, and outcomes overshadow the
macro approach. An industry is where competitive advantage is either won
or lost. The nation influences the ability of its firms to succeed in
particular industries. The outcome of many struggles in individual
industries determines the state of a nation's economy and its
ability to progress. Thus a firm must understand the national attributes
that are most crucial in determining its ability, or inability, to
create, foster, and sustain competitive advantage in international
terms.
A nation's standard of living in the long term depends on its
ability to attain a high and rising level of productivity in the
industries in which its firms compete. This rests on the capacity of its
firms to achieve improving quality or greater efficiency. The influence
of the home nation on the pursuit of competitive advantage in particular
fields is of central importance to the level and rate of productivity
growth achievable. The long-dominant model used to explain the influence
of nations in succeeding internationally in particular industries is
showing certain weaknesses. It is unable to explain why firms based in
particular nations are able to compete successfully in particular
industries, nor can it explain why a nation's firms are able to
sustain their competitive positions over considerable periods of time.
Porter explains, convincingly, wily previous efforts to explain the
competitiveness of an entire nation have been unconvincing, and why
attempting to do so is tackling the wrong question--as some see national
competitiveness as a macroeconomic phenomenon, driven by such variables
as exchange rates, interest rates, and budget deficits. Interestingly,
many nations have experienced rapidly rising living standards despite
budget deficits (Japan and Korea), appreciating currencies (Germany and
Switzerland). and high interest rates (Italy and Korea). The view that
competitiveness depends oil possessing abundant resources has been
contradicted by the most successful trading nations which are
resource-poor. Likewise, the view that competitiveness is the most
strongly influenced by governmental policy (targeting, protection,
export promotion, etc.) is not confirmed by a broader survey of
experience conducted by the author.
For Porter, the only meaningful concept of competitiveness at the
national level is the national productivity with which a nation's
resources are employed. Sustained productivity growth requires that an
economy continually upgrade itself. A nation's firms must
relentlessly improve productivity in existing industries by raising
product quality, adding desirable features (differentiated products),
improving product technology, boosting production efficiency or
improving the quality of factors of production through technological
progress. Firms musty also develop a capability to compete in even more
sophisticated and new industry segments, where productivity is generally
higher. This also absorbs human resources freed up in the process of
improving productivity in existing fields, say, with the introduction of
automation.
Expanding exports of competitive industries exerts an upward
pressure on the exchange rate, making it more difficult for the
relatively less productive industries in the nation to export. Employing
subsidies and protection to maintain such industries only slows down the
upgrading of the economy and limits the nation's long-term standard
of living. Thus the ability of a nation to export many goods produced
with high productivity, which allows the nation to import many goods
involving lower productivity, is a more desirable target because it
translates into higher national productivity. A fall in the world export
share in the high productivity industries is a danger signal for a
national economy. A rising sophistication of exports can support
productivity growth even if overall exports are growing slowly.
To explain "competitiveness" at the national level, one
must understand the determinants of productivity and the rate of
productivity growth--inter-linkage of these determinants is the core of
Porter's theory. To find answers, one should not focus on the
economy as a whole but on specific industries and industry segments.
This is because human resources, for example, which are the most
decisive in modern international competition, must possess high levels
of specialised skills in particular fields and be developed with much
effort, just like the development of commercially successful technology.
These are not the result of the general educational system alone.
Competitive advantage is a dynamic and evolving process and is created
and sustained through a highly localised process. Differences in
national economic structure, values, institutions, and histories
contribute profoundly to competitive success. It must be underscored
that cost advantage grows as much out of efficient-to-manufacture
product designs and leading process technology as it does out of factor
costs oz" even economies of scale.
Four broad attributes (hereafter called the "Diamond") of
a nation that shape the environment in which local firms compete (and
which promote or impede the creation of competitive advantage) are:
1. factor conditions: the nation's favourable position in
factors of production, and advanced and specialised factors, including
communication infrastructure and highly educated personnel;
2. demand condition: the nature of home demand for industry's
product or service;
3. related and supporting industries: the presence or absence in
the nation of supplier industries and related industries that are
internationally competitive;
4. firm strategy, structure, and rivalry: the conditions in the
nation governing how the companies are created, organised, and managed,
and the nature of domestic rivalry.
The role of government in national competitive advantage is
important in influencing all four determinants.
Porter suggests that a corporate leader firm must set its sights on
creating and sustaining competitive advantage as measured against the
best worldwide competitors. Firms should aspire to sustain success
rather than mere survival or the temporary profits of harvesting market
position. The following principles/ways are important for both domestic
and global competition.
1. Competitive advantage grows fundamentally out of improvement,
innovation, and change. A company should actively seek out pressure and
challenge, not try to avoid them. Some of the ways of doing so are as
follows: sell to the most sophisticated and demanding buyers and
channels; seek out the buyers with the most difficult needs; establish
norms of exceeding the toughest regulatory hurdles or product standards;
find sources from the most advanced and international home-based
suppliers; treat employees as permanent; establish outstanding
competitors as motivators: identify and serve buyers with the most
anticipatory needs; investigate all emerging new buyers; find the
localities whose regulations foreshadow those elsewhere; discover and
highlight the trends in factor costs; maintain ongoing relationships
with centres of research and sources of the most talented people; study
all competitors, especially the new and unconventional ones; bring some
outsiders into the management team; and serve home buyers who are
international and multinational.
2. Competitive advantage involves the entire value system (array of
activities). Close and ongoing interchange within the national cluster
are integral to the process of creating and sustaining advantage. These
interchanges include senior-level management contact, close links with
R&D institutions, reciprocity with researchers for testing new
products, and cooperation in penetrating and serving international
markets.
3. Competitive advantage is sustained only through relentless
improvement, continuous technological progress and efforts to
differentiate products, and position in the home and global markets.
4. Sustaining the advantage demands that its sources be upgraded. A
firm should develop advanced human resources and internal technical
capability; have more sources of advantage at its disposal so that the
imitator has more to match. It should make its less sustainable
advantages obsolete: for example, automating away much of the advantage
of relatively low-cost and productive labour. Destroy old advantages by
creating new ones, lest a rival should do so.
5. Sustaining advantage ultimately requires a global approach to
strategy. Penetrate foreign markets. Diversify production and serve
sophisticated buyers and markets. Increase global production and foreign
sourcing. Keep up with technology development abroad. Meet the best
competitors. Locate regional headquarters. Select foreign acquisitions
and make international alliances.
In Porter's theory, there is a role for government policy to
influence national advantage. However, government does not control the
national advantage policy; it can only influence the
"diamond". The central goal of the policy is to deploy a
nation's resources with high and rising levels of productivity. The
role of the government here is to stimulate such dynamism and upgrading.
There is a wide range of government policies that have a bearing on
national advantage in some industries. In this regard, education and
training policy, science and technology policy, tax policy, health-care
policy, anti-trust policy, regulatory policy, technical standards,
environmental policy, fiscal and monetary policy, trade policy,
provision of hard and soft infrastructure, procurement policies, and
many others are relevant. Government policy has a role in shaping the
breadth and international success of related and supporting industries
in the country, and is integral to the competitive upgrading of other
industries. Such policies include the policies towards the media and
cluster formation. Finally, government policy has much influence on the
way in which firms are created, organised, and managed; and on their
goals, and on how they compete.
This book has a strong message for the Pakistani economy, which is
suffering from virtual stagnancy of total factor productivity as
follows. Government policies towards industry in Pakistan must recognise
that the "diamond" is a system, which makes policies in many
areas interdependent. At present, a weak linkage has constrained the
development of the economy. There is, thus, a need for progress on each
determinant. Policies in Pakistan often aim to improve one aspect of the
national environment but impose unintended consequences by not
addressing the others.
The Government should not overstate or overplay its role in
national competitive advantage. Past policies have indeed adopted such a
course, which has created an economy of dependent, backward-looking, and
ultimately unsuccessful firms. The Government should recognise those
areas in which it has a legitimate influence in creating the conditions
for economic prosperity. As a top priority, the Government should
provide an enabling environment for factor creation and formation of
clusters, which already exist in some form The Government should also
adopt policies that create an environment conducive to the development
and advantage of industries and do not unnecessarily raise the cost of
production. Local firms should be encouraged to be responsive to modern
business and manufacturing practices.
Zafar Mahmood
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, Islamabad.