Driving forces of mining outsourcing: Evidence from China

The outsourcing of services by mining enterprises has become a significant global trend. Classic studies have demonstrated that outsourcing can help enterprises obtain professional services, improving productivity and reducing production costs. However, as a transitional economy, China has its uniqu...

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Main Author: ZHENG, Bingxu
Format: text
Language:English
Published: Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University 2023
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Online Access:https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/etd_coll/529
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/etd_coll/article/1527/viewcontent/GPBA_AY2016_DBA_ZHENG_Bingxu.pdf
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Institution: Singapore Management University
Language: English
id sg-smu-ink.etd_coll-1527
record_format dspace
institution Singapore Management University
building SMU Libraries
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider SMU Libraries
collection InK@SMU
language English
topic mining enterprises
outsourcing
driving force
China
Asian Studies
Strategic Management Policy
spellingShingle mining enterprises
outsourcing
driving force
China
Asian Studies
Strategic Management Policy
ZHENG, Bingxu
Driving forces of mining outsourcing: Evidence from China
description The outsourcing of services by mining enterprises has become a significant global trend. Classic studies have demonstrated that outsourcing can help enterprises obtain professional services, improving productivity and reducing production costs. However, as a transitional economy, China has its unique characteristics regarding the driving forces of service outsourcing. By employing a case study method, one mining service outsourcing provider, and five mining enterprises' interviews and archival data, this study constructs a theory to identify the driving forces and mechanisms of mining enterprises' choice of service outsourcing and a logic relationship between variables via a diagram. The case study results reveal that, firstly, through outsourcing, mining enterprises can obtain professional personnel, technology and management and further reduce their economic costs to achieve light asset operation, thereby further driving mining enterprises' choice of service outsourcing. Secondly, The professional services provided by outsourcing providers, including professional personnel, technology and management, can help reduce security risks. In addition, outsourcing can also transfer the safety production risk of mining enterprises to a certain extent and avoid the political risks of mining enterprises' senior executives, thereby prompting mining enterprises to choose outsourcing services. Thirdly, mining enterprises' choice of service outsourcing has heterogeneous ownership characteristics, i.e., private enterprises are more concerned about the cost-reducing effect brought by outsourcing services. In contrast, state-owned enterprises are more concerned about avoiding political responsibility. In the era when the fulfilment of social responsibility has already been incorporated into the management level of enterprise strategy, private mining enterprises need to pay more attention to long-term interests such as safety production. At the same time, influenced by the principal–agent problem, the economic driving force of China's state-owned mining enterprises is insufficient, and thus outsourcing may be a channel for senior executives to transfer the political risks they originally should bear. Therefore, in the transitional period of China, the benefit conversion mechanism behind mining enterprises' service outsourcing is complex, including the transformation of enterprise-borne management costs into market costs and the transfer of political risks borne by individual executives into economic costs of outsourcing enterprises. Furthermore, this study demonstrates that there is not only a transaction cost problem between internalization and externalization of the production links but also the conversion of different types of cost. From a practical point of view, regulatory authorities should not attribute mining enterprises' safety production accidents to outsourcing services and crudely impose a ban on agencies. Instead, they should encourage the development of qualified and capable outsourcing providers. At the same time, considering that outsourcing is also a channel for senior executives of mining enterprises to transfer political risks, it is also necessary for regulatory authorities to define the responsibilities of the contracting parties more precisely. From the perspective of outsourcing providers, on the one hand, enterprises need to improve production efficiency through technological innovation. On the other hand, they need to improve service flexibility through perfecting incentive mechanisms.
format text
author ZHENG, Bingxu
author_facet ZHENG, Bingxu
author_sort ZHENG, Bingxu
title Driving forces of mining outsourcing: Evidence from China
title_short Driving forces of mining outsourcing: Evidence from China
title_full Driving forces of mining outsourcing: Evidence from China
title_fullStr Driving forces of mining outsourcing: Evidence from China
title_full_unstemmed Driving forces of mining outsourcing: Evidence from China
title_sort driving forces of mining outsourcing: evidence from china
publisher Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University
publishDate 2023
url https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/etd_coll/529
https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/etd_coll/article/1527/viewcontent/GPBA_AY2016_DBA_ZHENG_Bingxu.pdf
_version_ 1794549505340735488
spelling sg-smu-ink.etd_coll-15272024-02-14T06:44:54Z Driving forces of mining outsourcing: Evidence from China ZHENG, Bingxu The outsourcing of services by mining enterprises has become a significant global trend. Classic studies have demonstrated that outsourcing can help enterprises obtain professional services, improving productivity and reducing production costs. However, as a transitional economy, China has its unique characteristics regarding the driving forces of service outsourcing. By employing a case study method, one mining service outsourcing provider, and five mining enterprises' interviews and archival data, this study constructs a theory to identify the driving forces and mechanisms of mining enterprises' choice of service outsourcing and a logic relationship between variables via a diagram. The case study results reveal that, firstly, through outsourcing, mining enterprises can obtain professional personnel, technology and management and further reduce their economic costs to achieve light asset operation, thereby further driving mining enterprises' choice of service outsourcing. Secondly, The professional services provided by outsourcing providers, including professional personnel, technology and management, can help reduce security risks. In addition, outsourcing can also transfer the safety production risk of mining enterprises to a certain extent and avoid the political risks of mining enterprises' senior executives, thereby prompting mining enterprises to choose outsourcing services. Thirdly, mining enterprises' choice of service outsourcing has heterogeneous ownership characteristics, i.e., private enterprises are more concerned about the cost-reducing effect brought by outsourcing services. In contrast, state-owned enterprises are more concerned about avoiding political responsibility. In the era when the fulfilment of social responsibility has already been incorporated into the management level of enterprise strategy, private mining enterprises need to pay more attention to long-term interests such as safety production. At the same time, influenced by the principal–agent problem, the economic driving force of China's state-owned mining enterprises is insufficient, and thus outsourcing may be a channel for senior executives to transfer the political risks they originally should bear. Therefore, in the transitional period of China, the benefit conversion mechanism behind mining enterprises' service outsourcing is complex, including the transformation of enterprise-borne management costs into market costs and the transfer of political risks borne by individual executives into economic costs of outsourcing enterprises. Furthermore, this study demonstrates that there is not only a transaction cost problem between internalization and externalization of the production links but also the conversion of different types of cost. From a practical point of view, regulatory authorities should not attribute mining enterprises' safety production accidents to outsourcing services and crudely impose a ban on agencies. Instead, they should encourage the development of qualified and capable outsourcing providers. At the same time, considering that outsourcing is also a channel for senior executives of mining enterprises to transfer political risks, it is also necessary for regulatory authorities to define the responsibilities of the contracting parties more precisely. From the perspective of outsourcing providers, on the one hand, enterprises need to improve production efficiency through technological innovation. On the other hand, they need to improve service flexibility through perfecting incentive mechanisms. 2023-05-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/etd_coll/529 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/etd_coll/article/1527/viewcontent/GPBA_AY2016_DBA_ZHENG_Bingxu.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Dissertations and Theses Collection (Open Access) eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University mining enterprises outsourcing driving force China Asian Studies Strategic Management Policy