by dinopello » Thu 19 Apr 2007, 19:35:05
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'W')e no longer have factories that literally produce a product from scratch to finish unlike the old days when Henry Ford was in business. Instead today's factories are configured to produce only a "component" of a product and everything gets shipped somewhere else for final assembly. Imagine how many times you've seen a truck on the freeway hauling a container. Chances are that container holds "components" and not actual finished products. weird huh?
Not so weird, same as it ever was.
I used to work for a company called TRW that makes "components" for automobiles. Formally Thomson Products, and before that The Cleveland Cap Screw Company founded in 1902 to make cap screws and starting in 1908 valve stems for Mr Ford's factory. The factory to make the components was downtown in 1908 until 1941 along with all the other component makers for Mr Ford and all the other auto manufacturers.
Maybe the level of integration of components has gone up. Now TRW delivers complete air bag systems and steering linkages to be carted over and integrated at the auto assembly plant, but thats probably because they have become so complex that its easier labor management and other reasons. TRW in turn, now buys their components from suppliers - but all the supply lines are longer - I presume because labor is a big component of cost and its done where that is cheap.
The idea of "local economies" is that people that make things, and their support services are geographically proximate as they are to their markets. An 18th century publisher didn't make their own ink, glue, or paper but bought these components and added value by printing the words and binding - although the printing and binding may have been done by different companies as well.
Local economies means smaller granularities, more component and service providers supporting more manufacturers and more distributers and resellers.
It happens a lot around here now with local, independent restaurants that buy their bread from local bakeries, produce from local farmers etc and hire local designers and architects to redo their interiors - supporting a complex local economy in this one segment.