Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- 1 Remaking management: neither global nor national
- Part I Conceptualising International and Comparative Management
- Part II Systems in Transition
- Part III Society as Open and Closed
- Part IV The Search for Global Standards
- Preface: Dominance, best practice and globalisation
- 12 The unravelling of manufacturing best-practice strategies
- 13 Policy transfer and institutional constraints: the diffusion of active labour market policies across Europe
- 14 Comparative management practices in international advertising agencies in the United Kingdom, Thailand and the United States
- 15 Corporate social responsibility in Europe: what role for organised labour?
- 16 Can ‘German’ become ‘international’? Reactions to globalisation in two German MNCs
- Index
12 - The unravelling of manufacturing best-practice strategies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- Notes on contributors
- 1 Remaking management: neither global nor national
- Part I Conceptualising International and Comparative Management
- Part II Systems in Transition
- Part III Society as Open and Closed
- Part IV The Search for Global Standards
- Preface: Dominance, best practice and globalisation
- 12 The unravelling of manufacturing best-practice strategies
- 13 Policy transfer and institutional constraints: the diffusion of active labour market policies across Europe
- 14 Comparative management practices in international advertising agencies in the United Kingdom, Thailand and the United States
- 15 Corporate social responsibility in Europe: what role for organised labour?
- 16 Can ‘German’ become ‘international’? Reactions to globalisation in two German MNCs
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Despite the emergence of the manufacturing strategy concept over thirty years ago (Skinner, 1969), there is still a recurrent trend in manufacturing management towards the adoption of best practices (Pilkington, 1998, 1999). The ‘Japanisation’ of production systems, in particular, was seen as a key means of generating industrial success in the 1980s and 1990s. Japanese practices and the resulting ‘lean’ mantra were moved from being societally bounded to having global reach, as Japanese products spread and Japanese TNCs moved out of Japan to set up production operations internationally. This shift mirrored the cyclical upswing in the Japanese economy relative to America and Europe, and produced a search for an explanation of success that was learnable and/or movable and not simply connected to Japanese territory.
This chapter explores the validity of a single lean system through the identification of the different operating methods found in Japanese car manufacturers during the period, and so challenges the notion and value of the best-practice approach. Data from US and UK industry show a lack of advancement from adopting Japanisation and so following the best-practice route. The transition of practices from Japan can be viewed as a transfer of structurally bounded strategies into a dominant system, and, in essence, the invention of ‘lean’ is a process of abstraction and conceptualisation that is able to reach a willing audience largely because of Japanese economic success.
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- Information
- Remaking ManagementBetween Global and Local, pp. 341 - 357Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008
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