The New Old Economy: Networks, Institutions, and the Organizational Transformation of American Manufacturing

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American manufacturing is in obvious crisis: the sector lost three million jobs between 2000 and 2003 as the American trade deficit shot to record highs. Manufacturers have increasingly decentralized productive responsibilities to armies of supplier firms, both domestic and abroad. Many have speculated as to whether or not manufacturing is even feasible in the United States, given the difficulties. Josh Whitford's book shows that discussion of this shift, in the media and in the academic literature, hits on the right issues - globalization, de-industrialization, and the outsourcing of production in marketized and in network relationships - but in an overly polarized way that obscures as much as it enlightens. Drawing on the results of extensive interviews conducted with manufacturers in the American Upper Midwest, Whitford shows that the range of possibilities is more complex and contingent than is usually recognized. Highlighting heretofore unexamined elements of constraint, contradiction and innovation that characterize contemporary network production models, Whitford shakes received understanding in economic and organizational sociology, comparative political economy, and economic geography to reveal ways in which the American economic development apparatus can be adjusted to better meet the challenges of a highly decentralized production regime.

Author(s): Josh Whitford
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Year: 2006

Language: English
Pages: 231

Contents......Page 10
Acknowledgments......Page 6
Introduction......Page 12
I: The New Old Economy......Page 18
Introduction to Part I......Page 20
1. A New Production Paradigm for a New Old Economy......Page 26
2. Networks, Noise, and Institutional Change......Page 37
II: Networks and the Organizational Transformation of American Manufacturing......Page 60
Introduction to Part II......Page 62
3. The Decentralization of American Manufacturing......Page 68
4. Collaboration in Practice: The Cost Reduction (Incremental Innovation) Waltz......Page 87
5. Uncertainty and Contradiction in the New Old Economy......Page 106
III: Institutions and the Relational Reconstruction of Regional Political Economy......Page 132
Introduction to Part III......Page 134
6. It Couldn’t Happen Here? Public Policy, Regional Institutions, and Interfirm Collaboration in the United States......Page 140
7. Toward the Relational Reconstruction of Regional Political Economy......Page 165
Appendix......Page 173
Notes......Page 189
References......Page 205
A......Page 216
C......Page 217
D......Page 218
F......Page 219
H......Page 220
I......Page 221
M......Page 222
N......Page 223
O......Page 224
P......Page 226
S......Page 227
U......Page 229
W......Page 230
Z......Page 231