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Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 1 www.pietrobelli.tk
Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and
Value Chains The Case of Latin America
Carlo PIETROBELLI, Università di Roma III ( [email protected] ) and
Roberta RABELLOTTI, Università del Piemonte Orientale ([email protected] )
THE DTI/UNIDO COMPETITIVENESS CONFERENCEAn Institutional Approach to Competitiveness – The critical role of
institutions at the national and regional levelPretoria, South Africa, 7-11 June 2004
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 2 www.pietrobelli.tk
In the final two decades of the century virtually all developing
countries increasingly liberalised their markets and forced
producers to operate on a global market.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 3 www.pietrobelli.tk
Developing Countries’ Openness to International Markets has Increased
(Exports+Imports)/GDP (%) (1960-98)
0,0
20,0
40,0
60,0
80,0
1960 1970 1980 1985 1990 1995 1997 1998
Sub-Saharan Africa East Asia & PacificLatin America & Caribbean South Asia
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 4 www.pietrobelli.tk
The key policy issue is not whether to partecipate in global
markets,
but how to do so in a way which provides for sustainable growth
This is a particular problem for SMEs, many of whom lack the capabilities to partecipate
effectively in global markets
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 5 www.pietrobelli.tk
There are two main paths of insertion in the global economy
(Kaplinsky & Readman, 2001)
• The low road is one of immiserizing growth, a trajectory in which producers face intense competition and are engaged in a “race to the bottom” . Examples: if export prices fall faster than export volumes increase (i.e. wodden furniture exports to E.U.) or if increased exports can only be paid for by lower wages (i.e. Synos Valley, Brazil).
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 6 www.pietrobelli.tk
•The high road is one of increasing and improving participation in the global economy, realising sustained income growth.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 7 www.pietrobelli.tk
What explains the difference between these
two paths?
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 8 www.pietrobelli.tk
UPGRADING Upgrading is a necessary condition for a
“high road” path to competitiveness in the context of globalization
i.e. increase and improve participation to the international economy, and ensure a sustainable growth of per capita
incomes
The present discussion of alternative “roads” to competitiveness refers to the macroeconomic
implications of enterprise-level strategies
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 9 www.pietrobelli.tk
UPGRADING = innovation to increase value added
Different forms of upgrading: of processes
of products
functional
intersectoral
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 10 www.pietrobelli.tk
INNOVATION is crucial for upgrading
innovation not defined as a breakthrough into a product or a process that is new to
the world.
It is rather a story of marginal, evolutionary improvements of products and processes, that are
new to the firm,
and that allow it to keep up with an international (moving) standard.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 11 www.pietrobelli.tk
Process upgrading
Firms can upgrade processes – transforming inputs into outputs more efficiently by re-organising the production system or introducing superior technology (i.e. footwear producers in the Synos Valley – Schmitz, 1999).
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 12 www.pietrobelli.tk
Product upgrading:
Firms can upgrade by moving into more sophisticated product lines (which can be defined in terms of increased unit values). Example: the apparel commodity chain in Asia upgrading from discount chains to department stores (Gereffi, 1999).
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 13 www.pietrobelli.tk
Functional upgrading:Firms acquire new functions (or abandon existing function) so that they increase the overall skill content of their activities. They might complement production with design or marketing, or move out of low-value production activities. Example: Torreon’s blue jeans industry upgrading from maquila to “full-package” manufacturing (Bair & Gereffi, 2001).
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 14 www.pietrobelli.tk
Intersectoral upgrading:
Firms may apply the competence acquired in a particular function to move into a new sector. For example, in Taiwan competence in producing TVs is used to make monitors and thus move into the computer sector (Humphrey & Schmitz, 2002, Guerrieri & Pietrobelli, 2004).
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 15 www.pietrobelli.tk
How can SMEs face the challenge of upgrading?
Through (local) industrial organization in the form of:
1. Clusters
2. Value Chains
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 16 www.pietrobelli.tk
The analysis of industrial clusters is focused on the role of local linkages in generating competitive advantages in export
industries.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 17 www.pietrobelli.tk
The global value chain literature takes a very
different approach emphasising cross-border linkages
between firms in global production and
distribution systems.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 18 www.pietrobelli.tk
A Cluster is a geographical agglomeration of
specialised enterprises
Firms (SMEs) localized within clusters benefit from collective efficiency:
Together, they generate external economies, that may affect (spillover) other firms (involuntary effects – passive – of participating in a cluster);
They may carry out joint actions (conscious effects – active – of participating to a cluster);
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 19 www.pietrobelli.tk
VALUE CHAIN is based on a simple idea:Design, production, marketing of a product, involve a chain
of activities carried out by different enterprises, in different places. Each activity adds value.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 20 www.pietrobelli.tk
Global Value Chains The focus of analysis of global value chains is on the
relationships among the different actors that are part of the chain.
The concept of ‘governance’ ( = coordination) is fundamental to understand such relationships;
Governance may occur thorugh:1. Market relations (Arm’s-length)2. Network relations, that is cooperation among firms with the
same level of power;3. Quasi-hierarchy, with relations among enterprises that are
legally independent, but one is hierarchically subordinate to the other;
4. Hierarchy, when a firm is owned by another (external) firm.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 21 www.pietrobelli.tk
Research Questions:
How to promote the competitiveness of SMEs localized in clusters and that participate in
global value chains?
How to design and implement policies?
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 22 www.pietrobelli.tk
We used a Toolkit to apply the following approach
Triple C with S
Clusters
ChainsCompetitiveness
with Sectors
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 23 www.pietrobelli.tk
Cluster and Collective Efficiency
Sectors’ Characteristics
Chains (governance)
Policy Options for Competitiveness
With indicators and measures for each dimension (external economies - skills, productive specialisation, geographical agglomeration, …-, Joint actions, relationships within the value chain, …. )
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 24 www.pietrobelli.tk
Methodology
Analysis of 50 empirical cases of clusters in LA (11 original)
Selection criteria: 1. Agglomeration; 2. Value Chains;3. Upgrading;4. Policy lessons;
Analysis and measurement of:1. Collective Efficiency [0-3] (external economies + joint actions)2. Governance of the value chains [Market, network, quasi-
hierarchy, hierarchy]3. Models of Upgrading: of products, processes, functional,
intersectoral [0-3]
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 25 www.pietrobelli.tk
The case studies1. Resource-based industries
• Agro-industry: melon in Rio Grande do Norte, mangos in Petrolina and apples in Santa Catarina, BRAZIL (R. Gomes, MIT, Boston)
• Salmon cluster in Southern CHILE (C. Maggi, Fondo de Innovación Tecnológica, Bío Bío)
• Milk and dairy cluster in Boaco and Chontales, NICARAGUA (N. Artola, Nitlapán, Universidad Centroamericana, Managua, and D. Parrilli, Università di Ferrara)
2. Complex Product Systems’ industries • Metalworking sector, State of Espirito Santo, BRAZIL (J. Cassiolato, Universidade Federal de Rio de
Janeiro and A. Villaschi, Universidade Federal do Espirito Santo)
3. Traditional Manufacturing Industries• Traditional furniture in Chipilo, Puebla, MEXICO (E. Zepeda, UAM, Mexico);
• Manufacturing Clusters in Mezzogiorno, ITALY (G. Viesti, Università di Bari and D.Cersosimo, Università della Calabria)
4. High Tech industries• Software clusters in Guadalajara, Monterrey, D.F., Aguascalientes, MEXICO (C. Ruiz Duran, UNAM)
5. An extensive survey on the existing literature • 50 cases of clusters and value chains in Latin America (E. Giuliani, Università di Pisa)
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 26 www.pietrobelli.tk
RESULTS of the Field Studies
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 27 www.pietrobelli.tk
1. COLLECTIVE EFFICIENCY (external economies and joint actions) foster
the process of UPGRADING CE has a positive effect on upgrading (e.g. Salmon cluster
in Chile, mangoes cluster in PJ and apples in SC, Brazil);
CE reaches higher levels in clusters based on NR and in software clusters;
The development of a cluster takes time;
External economies (passive) are more frequent: joint actions require specific investments, or responses to external challenges;
CE may be hindered by the domination of strong and hierarchical relations (e.g. Furniture cluster in Chipilo, Mex);
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 28 www.pietrobelli.tk
Collective efficiency varies across sectoral groups
Table 1: Collective Efficiency across sectoral groups Index of collective efficiency: average
EE JA CE Index* Traditional Manufacturing 7.6 5.23 6.31 NR-based 8.91 7,36 8,2 COPS 7.61 4.8 6.19 Specialised Suppliers 9.1 7.8 8.7 Source: Author’s database. * EE= external economies(average number and grade), JA = Joint actions (average number and grade), Collective Efficiency Index = 0,5*EE+0,5*JA
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 29 www.pietrobelli.tk
Collective Efficiency Enhances Upgrading
Table 2. Correlation Between Collective Efficiency and Upgrading*
Collective Efficiency
Product Upgrading
Process Upgrading
Functional Upgrading
Intersectoral Upgrading
Traditional HIGH 2.5 2.5 1.25 - Manufacturing MEDIUM 2 2.5 1 -
LOW 1,5 2.5 1 - HIGH 3 3 1 0.75
NR-based MEDIUM 2.5 2.33 0.33 - LOW 2 2 - 1 HIGH - - - -
COPs MEDIUM 2.33 2.66 1 - LOW 2.66 2.66 0.83 -
Software HIGH 3 3 2 - (Spec.Suppl.s) MEDIUM 3 3 2 -
LOW - - - - Source: Authors’ database. *The table presents the average level of each form of upgrading for each groups of cluster classified on the basis of the degree of collective efficiency.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 30 www.pietrobelli.tk
2. The Model of Governance of the Value Chain Affects SMEs’ Upgrading
Participation to global value chains led by large buyers from advanced countries (buyer-driven chains) fosters the relationships with the international market.
Large foreign buyers (chain leaders) favour product and process upgrading in traditional manufacturing sectors;
However, functional upgrading is rarely achieved;
Several forms of value chains coexist in the same cluster, and may offer profitable alternatives;
The governance of the value chain is a dynamic process, and it may evolve over time.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 31 www.pietrobelli.tk
3. The sectoral dimension is essential
In NR-based clusters: CE together with participation in value chains matter a lot!! (e.g. Fresh fruit clusters in SC and PJ, Bra, salmon in Chile, sugar in Valle del Cauca, Col);
In traditional manufacturing clusters: integration in value chains help product and process upgrading, but hinders functional upgrading (p.ej. Shoe cluster in Sinos Valley, Bra);
In Complex Systems Products (COPS): local CE do not matter much: chain leaders follow a global strategy and demand high quality standards and certification;
Software clusters: CE is an important factor of upgrading; opportunities for the development of niche markets close to clients (e.g. in Mex).
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 32 www.pietrobelli.tk
4. The macroeconomic context matters
Unfavourable Macroeconomic Conditions may rapidly revert success into failure (e.g. furniture cluster in Chipilo, Mex);
Competitive factors do not stay forever, are dynamic and change;
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 33 www.pietrobelli.tk
Understanding enterprise and cluster upgrading requires to consider also a
sectoral dimension• The learning – and upgrading - process differs
depending on the characteristics of the industrial sector;
• We classify sectors into four large categories, depending on the way learning and upgrading occur, and on the related model of industrial organization.
• We present the results for the different sectors.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 34 www.pietrobelli.tk
Table 1. Sectoral Groups: A Pavitt Taxonomy for Latin America
Groups Industries Learning Patterns Description
1. Traditional Manufacturing
Textile and garments, Footwear, Furniture, Tile
Mainly Supplier dominated
Most new techniques originate from machinery and chemical industries
Opportunity for technological accumulation are focused on improvements and modifications in production methods and associated inputs, and on product design.
Most of technology is transferred internationally, embodied in capital goods.
Low appropriability, low barriers to entry
2. Resource-based
industries
Sugar, Tobacco, Wine, Fruit, Milk
Extraction industries
Supplier dominated (Science-based)
Importance of basic and applied research led by public research institutes due to low appropriability of resources
Most of Innovation is generated by suppliers (machinery, seeds, chemicals etc.). Increasing importance of international sanitary and quality standards, and of patents
3. Complex Product Systems
industries
Automobile and autoparts, Aircraft, Consumer electronics
Scale intensive firms Technological accumulation is generated by the design, building and operation of complex production systems or products. Radical innovation is risky.
Process and Product technologies develop incrementally. For consumer electronics, technological accumulation emerges mainly from corporate R&D labs and university skills.
Appropriability is medium, barriers to entry high
4. Specialised Suppliers
Software
Specialized suppliers Often-small firms. Important user-producer interactions. Learning from advanced users.
Low barriers to entry and low appropriability
High in-house R&D for development of edge technologies
Source: Adapted from Pavitt, 1984, Bell and Pavitt, 1993, Malerba, 2000.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 35 www.pietrobelli.tk
Resource-based industries
• Process and product upgrading are necessary, and they are often related to the scientific base of the activity. This is due to the following characteristics of technology and scientific knowledge: high uncertainty, crucial constant innovation, results are public goods;
• In buyer-driven chains global buyers facilitate the link with the international market by signaling the need (and the modes) of the necessary upgrading. However, they do not normally foster and support the SMEs’ upgrading process;
• Positive relationship between the degree of collective efficiency and upgrading (i.e. institutional network, research centers, Universities, international co-operation);
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 36 www.pietrobelli.tk
Complex Product Systems’ Industries
• Technological accumulation and upgrading are generated by the design and development of parts & components of complex products;
• Global value chains are dominated by large assemblers and their first-tier suppliers (producer-driven chains);
• Local suppliers (which are second or third-tier) are required to attain high quality standards and certifications to be part of the subcontracting network but the lead firms have little understanding and sensitivity of the upgrading concerns of local firms;
• Little collective efficiency, and upgrading is left to the market;
• Spin-offs appear to be a way of diffusing capabilities;
• Difficult perspectives for locally-owned second or third-tier suppliers
• A viable strategy is to find a profitable niche by servicing large leading firms in the chain (e.g. metalworking cluster in Espirito Santo, Br.).
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 37 www.pietrobelli.tk
Traditional Manufacturing Industries• “Supplier-dominated” as major process innovations are introduced
by machinery and materials producers;
• Upgrading may occur by incremental developments and imitation; large buyers often help as they depend on the skills of their local suppliers;
• Integration into value chains is a two-edged sword:• On the one hand, it facilitates inclusion and rapid enhancement of
product and process capabilities;
• On the other hand, SMEs become tied into relationships that often prevent functional upgrading (e.g. Sinos Valley footwear cluster, Br.);
• Collective efficiency favors local firms’ capabilities to process and product upgrade;
• A leader-firm (and an innovative entrepreneur) may spur the creation of a cluster of successful firms:
• The example set by the leader may be followed by others, who may benefit from the learning already acquired by the innovator (footwear cluster in Puebla, Mx. and sofa and shoe clusters in Puglia, Italy);
• Nevertheless, a cluster takes time to develop and excessive dependence on few players may be risky (footwear cluster in Puebla)
• Favourable macroeconomic conditions are essential.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 38 www.pietrobelli.tk
High Tech industries• Our focus on software (client-driven to develop or adapt software
packages to the specific requirements of local clients);• Technological accumulation from corporate R&D labs and
Universities;• Low barriers to entry, start-ups near major clients;• Software houses perform incremental product and process
improvements. Functional upgrading is easier ( i.e. when software firms engage in design and commercialisation of their activities).
• The relationships with clients is usually of a market/network type;• Local firms perform low value added activities, but the presence
of a leading firm may facilitate access to markets and sustain the formation of skilled labour force, but without direct knowledge transfer
• Spin-offs are a mean of diffusion of knowledge and generate start-ups.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 39 www.pietrobelli.tk
What Policy Implications?
How to promote competitiveness and upgrading in SMEs’ localised in clusters and that participate in global value chains?
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 40 www.pietrobelli.tk
Policy Approach prevailing in Latin America in the 1980s and
1990sAn effective model to design business support policies had to be
based on the principles of:
1. Neutrality (ex-ante definition of universal rules, separation of support institutions from lobbies)
2. Horizontality: rules apply to all, independent on size, location, sector;
3. Demand orientation: all support initiatives must respond to an explicit demand from the enterprise sector – often required to co-finance them-)
It was often lacking an integrated and consistent vision of local SMEs competitiveness and upgrading
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 41 www.pietrobelli.tk
ACTION MENU TO PROMOTE CLUSTERS’ COMPETITIVENESS
Promote the development of External Economies
Promote and improve inter-firm relationships
Strengthen local position within global value chains
Source: based on authors’ field studies
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 42 www.pietrobelli.tk
2. Promote and Improve Inter-firm Relationships
Create and improve trust among enterprises
Promote joint projects
Create and strengthen I ndustrialists’ Business Associations
Improve and strengthen local supply of real and financial services;
Improve external linkages of the cluster.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 43 www.pietrobelli.tk
3. Strengthen local standing within global value chains
Attract chain leaders into the cluster
Promote upgrading of local intermediate input providers;
Help interactions within the value chains (‘articuladores’)
Foster access to new markets and alternative value chains
Support SMEs in their efforts to achieve international standards (quality, sanitary, ….)
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 44 www.pietrobelli.tk
Policy Implications
Policies need to differ for different sectors
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 45 www.pietrobelli.tk
What can be done to assist SMEs located in resource-based clusters to upgrade?
• Facilitate the entry of SMEs• Promote/support programs and projects that explicitly benefit
production by SMEs alongside larger growers in cases where a) the participation by SMEs is economically viable and technically feasible and b) SMEs have already proven that they can compete in the sector;
• Possible Actions: allocation of lots in public projects for SMEs and larger growers, availability of working and investment capital by development banks, access to appropriate storage facilities at ports, support to participate in national and international trade fairs;
• Promote public-private collaboration in research and in particular SMEs involvement;
• Disseminate research to SMEs;• Promote the adoption of quality standards and enforce
quality inspection and control:• Loans conditioned on implementation + maintenance of quality
standards;
• Support the improvement of the regulatory framework (environmental controls, health standards, etc.).
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 46 www.pietrobelli.tk
What can be done to assist SMEs which are part of COPs to upgrade?
• Promote/support the active and dynamic role of actors acting as network-brokers (articuladores) of the cluster (“anchor” firms and small suppliers);
• Financial support for initiatives to build up firms’ consciousness of the utility of inter-firm cooperation and of their potential as local suppliers (joint training programs, joint purchases, …);
• Set up an incentive framework aimed at inducing large firms to source locally their intermediate inputs and services and to support their suppliers’ upgrading strategies;
• Assist second and third-tier suppliers to accumulate financial and managerial expertise needed to internationalize when they have the opportunity to follow sourcing (services and parties are supplied by the same company in different locations).
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 47 www.pietrobelli.tk
What can be done to assist SMEs located in traditional clusters to upgrade?
• Maintain macro conditions under control;• Sustain collective efficiency in the cluster (vertical and horizontal
joint actions, firms’ sensitiveness to co-operation..) Examples:• Strengthen local institutional network (Business Development Services
Centers, Universities, Business Associations, Training Institutes, etc.); • Set up of a participatory process of enhancement of the local context
involving a coalition of local public and private actors (e.g. “Patti Territoriali” implemented in many Southern Italian clusters);
• Provide the financial means, in co-operation with the private sector, to implement the collective entrepreneurial and infrastructural projects, identified through the process of participatory decision;
• Build a specialised workforce. Actions could include:• Qualify people for employment and establish cluster skill centers;• Form partnerships between educational institutions and clusters;
• Promote clusters to find alternative markets to the main value chains in which they are integrated. Actions could include:
• Support marketing and branding of the cluster (e.g. “Made in Brazil” project in the Synos Valley shoe cluster);
• Form export networks;• Sustain collective participation in international trade fairs.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 48 www.pietrobelli.tk
What can be done to assist SMEs located in high-tech clusters to upgrade?
• Invest in cluster R&D;
• Develop advanced technical education;
• Provide infrastructural support to start-ups;
• Give incentives or set aside funds for multi-firm projects;
• Promote institutional networks involving private actors, Universities, local governments.
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 49 www.pietrobelli.tk
In general ….Cluster policies are NOT the
panacea of industrial development;Selectivity:
• Selection of clusters;• Actions directed to few essential priorities; • Need to develop and use good diagnostics
tools to detect and analyse clusters;
Policies need to evolve over time;
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 50 www.pietrobelli.tk
On Evolution of Policies: the Chilean Salmon Cluster
From 0 to 25% of world salmon farming
Exports: 1985 US$ 1 mill., 2002 US$ 1,000 mill.
Policies have evolved over time
1978-85 “Initial learning”: regulation, technology transfer, investment in pre-competitive research
1986-95 “Maturing”: physical infrastructure, export promotion and marketing, innovation and development of suppliers (cages, nets, food)
1996-today: “Globalization”: productivity increase and technology transfer, environmental management, biotechnology (diseases and genetic handling)
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 51 www.pietrobelli.tk
To sum uppolicies always need to be:
Location-(context) specific Specific for each group of sectors Intensive in coordination Intensive in human capital Dynamic
Pietrobelli – Rabellotti Competitiveness and Upgrading in Clusters and Value Chains: Latin America 52 www.pietrobelli.tk
Thank you !!!!
Prof. Carlo PietrobelliUniversity of Rome III, Italy