Technical Compatibility Standards and Co-Ordination of the Industrial and International Division of Labour W. Edward Steinmueller SPRU – Science and Technology.

Post on 30-Mar-2015

217 Views

Category:

Documents

1 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

Transcript

Technical Compatibility Standards andCo-Ordination of the Industrial and International Division of Labour

W. Edward SteinmuellerSPRU – Science and Technology Policy Research

University of Sussex, United Kingdom

Prepared for the Conference:Advancing Knowledge and the Knowledge Economy Sponsored by:U.S. National Science FoundationOrganisation for Economic Cooperation and DevelopmentResearch Directorate-General, European CommissionInformation Society Directorate-General, European CommissionU.S. Interagency Working Group on IT R&D University of Michigan

Platforms – What are they?

Platforms are systems comprised of component productsand/or services that must be integrated to become useful.

Platform integrators are companies that have the knowledge to perform the integration when the final user is not willing or able to do so.

Component suppliers are the companies with the knowledge to produce the components integrated into the system.

Knowledge is required to integrate components into platforms – in particular, reliable knowledge of the interface between components

Technical Compatibility Standards

Technical compatibility standards are the specifications for the integration of components into a platform – they are a form of knowledge

These standards may be the familiar standards published by standards organisations (IEEE, ISO, CCITT, SAE, etc.) organisations that generally insist on non-discriminatory access

Second, these standards may be controlled by individual companies (a kind of sponsored standard)

Or these standards may be negotiated between a platform producer and related component suppliers

Published, sponsored, and negotiated standards define possible technical divisions of labour between companies (that may be located in different countries)

Examples

Source: Microsoft Encarta

The Generic Personal Computer Platform

A Leading Food Processor Platform

Source: Cuisinart

Multi-Supplier Stereo Component Platform

Source: Tampa Cabinets

Creating a Platform

Platforms are a kind of innovation• Their acceptance by the market is uncertain• First implementations will later appear crude• Their success often involves adoption network externalities

Each type of standardisation process has advantages and disadvantages in the design of a platform

Sponsored – faster to marketNegotiated – greater commitment of suppliersEmergent or published – more likely to engage adoption

externalities

Ideally, one might move in the ‘early years’ from sponsored to emergent/published standards, but ‘breaking up’ is hard to do

Why is system ‘decomposition’ becoming easier?

Information and communication technologies help in two ways:

1. Organisational interfaces for co-ordination are facilitated by the spread of ERP (enterprise resource planning systems) and related software

2. Technical specification and communication are aided by computer aided design and engineering

These technologies have, however, not proven to be a panacea.

Problems of representation and negotiation of knowledge still limit their technological potential

What prevents this jet engine from being based on publishedstandards?

Source: Aircraft Magazine, 1958

In essence, the question is…

Source: Northern Ireland Technology CentreMSc Computer Aide Design Project

Individual sub-assemblies can certainly be represented precisely by computer aided design and engineering…

Source: Roland Modela Example: Toto

Physical prototyping is rapidly advancing…

However, a series of problems remain…

1. Uncertainties of platform ‘take off’ means designs start as proprietary and controlled – breaking up is then harder to do

2. In distributing design, interfaces have to work or finger pointing occurs – knowledge is not easily distributed or agreed

3. Product liability matters

4. Technologies for modelling and simulating the platform are still being developed

5. There are difficult problems of market power between the platform producer and the component supplier

6. Standards can be sticky due to user adoptionWith this platform, the industry is still trying to get rid of theCentronics parallel printer and RS-232 serial ports.Old standards ‘stick’ to platforms…

And we all know howeasy it is to integratenew pieces of kit tothis platform…

Right!

The Economic Issues

Successful platforms create market power

In the first instance, this is more of a problem for component producers than for social welfare

Producing a commodity product is not the most desirable of careers

Ultimately, however, market power can become a social welfare problem

In both Europe and the US, we are trying to grapplewith the limits of Microsoft’s platform control

The traditional approach to these issues is platform competition…

Every attachment for this platform is controlled by Cuisinart

We think this is ok because there are several food processorplatform producers and competition between them has created substantial variety in both quality and price

Not all platforms maysupport this amount ofplatform variety

Adoption externalities mayfavour design convergenceor a ‘dominant design’

This has value because it allows the reuse of knowledge

Is competition between platforms becoming less effective?

Business strategy is adapting to the platform idea

Platform producers attempt to recruit families of companiessupplying components for the platform to increase adoption externalities (or, more prosaically, ‘buy-in’ to the platform)

Adoption externalities may be increasing due to improvements in information (e.g. trade promotion)

As markets become larger through internationalisation, the ability of buyers to co-ordinate pro-active efforts to increase platform competition becomes more difficult

The attainability and value of ‘open standards’

Attainable when market growth aligns incentives of bothcomponents and platform producers

Alternatively, buyers may resist ‘closed standards’

Note, however, open standards can still be controlled by a dominant platform or component producers whose next generation design choices define the standard…

Value stems from• Increase long run competition among component producers• Possibility of enabling competition in platforms• Platform components can be individually improved (division

of labour in knowledge production)• International division of labour supporting growth and income distribution

When ‘open standards’ can’t be achieved or maintained

--Market power issues may create social welfare loss--Intellectual property seems to have an indefinite lifetime--Market power can be extended

Remedy: We don’t have one.• ‘Essential facility’ arguments have not been able to

generate political consensus.• Antitrust rules often encounter market definition

problems, particularly when markets for unbundled components exist

Only user-activism seems effective – and this requires difficult mobilisation issues

We need better tools for analysing the nature and extent of market power in distributed or networked knowledge industries

Pro-competitive policies

are not straightforward…

Interventions can

1. Support research to improve ‘anticipation’ to reducethe need for competitive search for best implementation[This allows users to be pro-active.]

2. Provide a strong market (government procurement) for more ‘open’ standards (with risks of premature standards)

3. Support research on modelling and simulation thatwould reduce co-ordination costs of making moreopen or ‘modular’ systems

Signs of progress…

Europe, and then the US, have made it possible to ‘reverse engineer’ software interfaces to achieve more ‘open’ systems

Companies attempting to do this may still bediscouraged by litigation related to strong IPR

Internationalisation of markets has followed the rule, ‘the division of labour is limited by the extent of the market’ making more components available for constructing competing platforms

However, branding and the maintenance and support services available from incumbent platform producers

(e.g. Otis Elevator) have countered this tendency

The ‘open source’ movement is encouraging – its limits and problems are worth even more research

Frontiers

Service platforms involving ‘soft interfaces’ are expanding and need a ‘standards process’ – XML discussions are a symptom

Mixed platforms involving both physical components and service bundles are a major business opportunity

Many specialised system solutions involve building on open source software and open standard framework

Solving cognitive and co-ordination problems in research is a lead-user activity with potential spill-overs to other activities

Learning activities (in training and education) similarly provide a lead-user context for exploring co-ordination and negotiation of cognitive problems

Conclusions

Regulation of platform dominance needs policy innovation –so far policy has been a blunt instrument

Reducing dependence on proprietary standards (and intellectual property protection) as a source of ‘wealth creation’ would create a more competitive and perhaps a more innovative economy

Pro-competitive policies are available and can be implemented (many involve improving quality of information to users)

Research tracing the contribution of ‘open standards’ and their value to the economy is a partial antidote to claims about the innovative contribution of IPR-based proprietary standards

top related