4.6 Article

Addressing Governance Gaps in Global Value Chains: Introducing a Systematic Typology

Journal

JOURNAL OF BUSINESS ETHICS
Volume 170, Issue 4, Pages 657-672

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10551-019-04388-1

Keywords

Political CSR; Global value chains; Governance gaps; Living wage

Ask authors/readers for more resources

MNEs play a dominant role in governing GVCs and are responsible for addressing governance gaps according to PCSR. However, PCSR lacks a clear definition and guidance on how to analyze and address these gaps. This study proposes a nuanced view that governance gaps result from ineffective governance mechanisms, contributing to understanding governance gaps and identifying mechanisms to address them.
Multinational enterprises (MNEs) dominate the governance of global value chains (GVCs), such that according to the concept of political corporate social responsibility (PCSR), they are responsible to address governance gaps throughout the chains, even at the level of their independent suppliers. In practice, MNEs often struggle to cope with the complexity of these governance gaps, and PCSR does not provide a clear definition nor offer guidance for how to analyze and address them. By adopting the notion of governance mechanisms from GVC literature, this study proposes a more nuanced view, in which governance gaps result from inactive, ineffective, or inequitable governance mechanisms adopted by relevant actors, rather than a complete absence of governance. MNEs, through their governance mechanisms, commonly create governance gaps. This study distinguishes different types of governance mechanisms to create a typology of governance gaps, such that it contributes to the literature on PCSR by offering a more refined understanding of governance gaps, along with a means to identify mechanisms to address them. Furthermore, it contributes to the literature on GVCs by defining governance-related terms and adding an ethical perspective on MNEs' global business conduct. To illustrate the typology, this article presents the case of low wages (below a living wage) for workers in the textile industry and efforts by H&M to deal with this governance gap.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available