Kia

Turning Crisis into Opportunity: Is Korean Automobile firms in the new century leap forward?

Chung, Myeong-Kee (2011).  Turning Crisis into Opportunity: Is Korean Automobile firms in the new century leap forward?. Gerpisa colloquium.
The global automotive markets have sharply declines from the fall of 2008 in consequence of the financial crisis. Under extremely severe conditions, automobile makers run a race for survival in the global market. To respond to the crisis, automobile manufacturers must solve liquidity problems urgently and reduction in production cost. They also have implemented creative marketing strategies to entice reluctant consumers, even though it has not helped the catastrophic drop in sales.
 
There is no doubt that the automobile industry is going through a fundamental shift. A recession of worldwide automobile demands has been affected by financial crisis is prompting automobile manufactures to form alliances and shift on concentrating on the emerging market, which has withstood the slump amid economic growth and government subsidies. Nevertheless Korean automobile manufacturer cannot escape the global financial crisis; Korea major OEM makers Hyundai & Kia is not immune to global credit crunch.
 

In this context, my paper will look at current market situation and new trends in the Korean automobile industry and its future prospects. This paper also aims to provide preliminary understanding regarding the development pathway of Korean automobile makers in order to survival in the current global financial crisis. The paper is organized as follows. Part 1 analysis of the features of Korean market and describe Korean automakers performance in the periods of global crisis. Part 2 focuses on the new market trend, which is caused by Korean domestic economy condition after global financial crisis. The crisis leaded a structural change in automobile consumption downsizing. In last part, a detailed description of Korean automakers is presented to explain how the Korean firms compete in the financial crisis.    

Globalization or Regionalization of the American and Asian Car Industry

Freyssenet, Michel, Koichi Shimizu, & Giuseppe Volpato (2003).  Globalization or Regionalization of the American and Asian Car Industry. 272.

Over the next few decades, will lean production, and a generalised deregulation of trade have become the norms for the international environment in which firms and political and economic spaces will be operating?

From 1993 to 1996, the GERPISA, a French-based international research network that is devoted to the study of the automobile industry and its labour force, carried out an initial programme entitled, "The Emergence of New Industrial Models”, a project in which it examined whether existing industrial models were effectively starting to converge towards the principles of "lean production" – as had been theorised by MIT’s IMVP team. By focusing on what was happening in the automobile industry, the GERPISA Group’s work was able to demonstrate the great diversity, and divergence, of the trajectories that firms have been following in recent times. There is no " one best way" today - there never has been, and there probably never will be. In fact, the first GERPISA research project made it possible to identify and characterise not one, but three industrial models, all of which have been in operation since the 1970s: the Toyotaist model; the Hondian model; and the Sloanian model (epitomised today by Volkswagen, not GM).

Companies follow different profit strategies – their attempts to increase their profitability cause them to favour certain policy combinations rather than others (for example volume and diversity, quality, innovation and flexibility, the permanent reduction of costs, volumes, etc.). However, in order to be efficient, all of these strategies have to fit in with the environments in which they are to be applied - especially with respect to the modes of income growth and distribution that are being practiced in the spaces under consideration. Moreover, to form an "productive model", made of an “enterprise-government compromise” between the main parties (that are the shareholders, management, unions, workforce, and suppliers), the strategies need to be implemented coherently. This analytical framework is presented in Boyer, R., Freyssenet, M., [/i]The productive models. The conditions of profitability[/i], Palgrave, London, New York, 2002.

From 1997 to 1999, GERPISA realised a second international program, entitled "Automobile Industry between Globalisation and Regionalisation". This project tested the thesis that globalisation is an imperative for corporate profitability; and that it is the inevitable consequence of the deregulation of trade in the aforementioned “new” spaces. This was the logical extension of the first programme, given that "lean production" was as the most suitable model for markets which are variable and diversified, and which are ostensibly moving towards a single global standard. Firms are establishing themselves across the four corners of the planet; new industrialised nations are emerging, as a result of their having opened up to international trade; and more recently, certain auto-makers have been at the heart of some mega-mergers. All of these events have supported the thesis of globalisation, a process which is supposedly galvanised by the fact that companies, in their efforts to benefit from economies of scale, and from improved costs structures, are forever increasing their organisational integration, and are doing this on an ever greater geographical scale. The commercial opening of the new spaces, which some expect to create a homogenisation of demand, is also deemed to contribute to this process.

The present publication aims to carry out a systematic description and analysis of the trajectories of internationalisation that are being followed by the various types of firms which are involved in the automobile industry (manufacturers, suppliers and dealers). A companion book (Carillo, J., Lung, Y., Van Tulder, R. (eds), Cars…Carriers of Regionalism) focusses on the trajectories that are being followed in the different spaces (in the industrialised and emerging countries, in the regional groupings) - and it tests the hypothesis of the spaces’ diversity and divergence. These studies identify and characterise the different processes of periodic re-heterogenisation, and the conditions that are necessary if firms, and spaces, are to be successful. Moreover, within this perspective, they will be particularly keen to analyse the steps that are being taken in order that firms’ and spaces’ trajectories can be adjusted and hybridised - actions which in all probability will require considerable strategic and organisational inventiveness. The book highlights the preference for regionalization rather than globalization that has occurred over the past decade. This book looks specifically at the Asian and American car industry. A companion book looks at the European Car Industry.

Content

1 Introduction: The Diversity of Internationalization Strategies and Trajectories of Automobile Sector Firms, Michel Freyssenet, Koichi Shimizu and Giuseppe Volpato

2 The Internationalization of American and Asian Automobile Firms: A Statistical Comparison with the European companies, Bruno Jetin

Part I Towards the Regionalization of the Global Strategies of US Automakers, Suppliers and Dealers

3 The Twin Internationalization Strategies of US Automakers: GM and Ford, Gérard Bordenave and Yannick Lung

4 The Internationalization of American Automobile Service Companies and Changes in Distribution, Bernard Jullien

Part II The Diversity of Internationalization Trajectories and the Local Hybridization of Japanese and Korean Automobile Firms

5 A Maverick in the Age of Mega-mergers? Toyota’s Global Strategy, Koichi Shimizu

6 Nissan: From a Precocious Export Policy to a Strategic Alliance with Renault, Hiroshi Kumon

7 Honda, an Independent Global Automobile Company, out of the ‘Four Million Units Club’, Koichi Shimokawa

8 The Chance for a Peripheral Market Player: The Internationalization Strategies of the Korean Automobile Industry, Myeong-Kee Chung

9 Conclusion: Regionalization of the American and Asian Automobile Industry, More Than Globalization, Michel Freyssenet, Koichi Shimizu and Giuseppe Volpato

Appendix: The GERPISA International Network 231

Index

Globalization or Regionalization of the American and Asian Car Industry
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