Can local markets and clusters represent a powerful alternative to global markets? Do transnational corporations and global buyers play a role and enhance or undermine local firms' upgrading and learning? What opportunities do clustering and global value chains offer to SMEs in global markets?
Upgrading to Compete, a co-publication between DRCLAS and the Inter-American Development Bank, shows that both the local and the
global dimensions matter at once. Clustering and collaborating with
other local firms offers substantial advantages, and participating in
global value chains and interacting with foreign buyers and companies
may enhance local firms' capabilities and access to distant markets as
well. However, what matters most markedly is the form of governance of
value chains and clusters, which affects the upgrading process of local
SMEs. Thus, hierarchical and less cooperative chains often inhibit more
complex and promising forms of upgrading.
The book illustrates this
point with original empirical evidence from several clusters in Latin
America. Case studies from Brazil, Chile, Mexico, and Nicaragua are
supplemented by desk studies on other experiences in the region. The
methodological foundations and the policy implications of these
analyses are also exhaustively addressed.