4.6 Article

Industry 4.0 and production recovery in the covid era

Journal

TECHNOVATION
Volume 114, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.technovation.2021.102443

Keywords

COVID-19; Industry 4; 0; SME; Manufacturing; Production recovery; Mediator; Digital reorganization; Classical reorganization

Funding

  1. Universita degli Studi di Torino and Centro Studi delle Camere di Commercio Guglielmo Tagliacarne

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This study uses quantitative analysis to explore the effects of openness to Industry 4.0 on the perceived production recovery post the COVID-19 pandemic, mediated by digital and classical reorganization. The results show that openness to Industry 4.0 has a positive and significant direct effect on a perceived production recovery in the short term and medium term. The effect is accelerated in the short term by digital reorganization and in the medium term by the addition of classical reorganization. The study provides managerial implications based on a large sample of empirical data, suggesting that Industry 4.0 technologies, coupled with digital reorganization, can accelerate production recovery to pre-COVID-19 levels.
This study aims to use a quantitative analysis to explore the effects of openness to Industry 4.0 on the perceived production recovery post the COVID-19 pandemic, mediated by digital and classical reorganization. Openness to Industry 4.0 is measured by the breadth of the number of technologies adopted. The production recovery is measured by the perception of firms that a return to pre-COVID-19 production levels will happen within either 2021, 2022, or 2023. The study takes a representative sample of 2622 manufacturing small and medium en-terprises across Italy (surveyed between October and November 2020) through a mediation analysis based on nonlinear probability models (KHB method). The results of the models show the following. First, openness to Industry 4.0 has a positive and significant direct effect on a perceived production recovery in the short term (within 2021) and medium term (within 2022 and 2023). Further, this effect is accelerated in the short term by digital reorganization and in the medium term by the addition of a classical reorganization. The research pro-vides relevant managerial implications based on a large sample of current empirical data, showing that Industry 4.0 technologies, when adopted in tandem with the digital reorganization of production activity, can accelerate production recovery to pre-COVID-19 levels.

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