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Manufacturing and offering logistics services in Central and Eastern Europe . David Chelly EMIL School of Industrial and Systems Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology 4th of October, 2005. Aims of the session.
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Manufacturing and offering logistics services in Central and Eastern Europe David Chelly EMILSchool of Industrial and Systems Engineering Georgia Institute of Technology4th of October, 2005
Aims of the session • This session provides EMIL participants with the necessary facts and figures to understand the challenges and opportunities of manufacturing and offering logistics services in Eastern and Central Europe. • This session may interest them, as Central and Eastern European countries offer excellent opportunities to American companies.
The instructor • David CHELLY • Head of a consultancy firm and a website (http://www.centreurope.org) specialized in business with Central & Eastern Europe • Former expatriate in Prague and Sofia, professor of management in various business and engineering schools • Ph.D in Management Sciences, post-graduate diploma in Finance, degrees in Money and Banking, Law, Accounting and Sociology. contacts@centreurope.org
The session’s outline & assignment • 1. Central and Eastern Europe basics • 2. The political and business environment • 3. Manufacturing in Central and Eastern Europe • 4. Offering Logistic services in Central and Eastern Europe • Assignment: 5-10 pages on your company’s presence in one Central and Eastern European country (see documents).
A rich and ancient history • It is not because we (French people) don’t know Central and Eastern Europe history that these countries do not have any history. • Almost all CEE countries have played a major role in Europe in their history Cyrille and Méthode, inventors of the Cyrillic alphabet Charles the IVth (1346-1378), King of Rome and Empereur of the Holy German Empire
Central Europe • Long dominated by the Habsburg Empire, the history of Central Europe has been marked by education, art and modernism. • While in 1789 in France only a third of the citizens were able to speak and read French, education in German had been compulsory for a century in the whole Habsburg kingdom • Czech TV commercial for the preservation of art >>
Eastern Europe • Eastern European countries used to live under the Ottoman and the Russian Empires rule, which prevented their economic development. • The Orange revolution in Ukraine >> Vlad Tepes (1428-1476), a Romanian figure of the struggle against the Ottoman Empire.
An generalized improvement of the economic performances • Hyper-inflation had severely hit most CEE countries • But this issue is today under control • After a deep collapse of their GDP, Central European countries have been achieving steady economic growths, followed by most Eastern European countries The Bric Nation to outdo Europe and the US >>
The communist heritage • Central and Eastern European countries have lived forty (seventy) years of communism, which still influence local behaviors and habits. • The communist heritage: • Corrupted civil servants, • unreliable businessmen, • opportunist politicians…
Young democracies with unstable governments • Local democracies suffer from a lack of political maturity. • The leading coalitions are not able to keep the power due to a too large number of political parties and to political scandals But the political risk is limited to only a few countries in the CIS and in the Balkans
Ailing institutions • Most Central and Eastern European states suffer from bureaucracy and corruption • (cf. World corruption index >> • Most institutions (The Police, Universities, Hospitals…) in Central and Eastern Europe are in crisis • Income inequalities and regional discrepancies are widening • Eastern Europe faces a serious demographic problem. • On the main square of Sofia, one can buy the most recent software CDs for a few dollars.
Towards a stronger Europe? • A group with 25 + countries offers a stronger opposition to the other world powers • The US response • The EU must adjust itself to the enlargement process • Is it able to ? • How far can we go ? Will they get along together ?
Why invest in Central and Eastern Europe ? • Foreign direct investments in all sectors and from all countries are welcomed and little restricted. • (cf. Index of Economic Freedom >> • Central and Eastern European countries benefits from an relatively cheap labour force and an advantage of territorial location. • But the main reason for FDI is good access to domestic and foreign markets
A qualified workforce… • The workforce is • Qualified, especially in technical fields • relatively cheap, especially in Eastern Europe • respectful for hierarchy and rules and able to stand hard working conditions • So how can we explain such low salaries? In spite of a high qualification in technical fields such as computer sciences, Bulgaria’s wages are about 10 times lower than in Western Europe
… but a low labor productivity • World competitiveness rankings >> • Commitment (especially towards foreign investors), sense of initiative, mutual trust between workers, customer satisfaction, ability to communicate and ethics at work are low • « pretend to pay us and we will pretend to work » • « the one who does not steal, steals his family » (Czech proverbs) • Workers tend to behave in a more productive way in Eastern Europe than in Central Europe
Where and how to invest ? • A few countries attract the majority of FDI • Privatizations, Joint ventures and licensing offer limited opportunities • The most profitable way of investment is the Greenfield investment • Good personal networks are crucial to succeed in Central and Eastern Europe
IV. Offering logistic services in Central and Eastern Europe
The transportation and logistics sector • Unlike Eastern Europe, Central Europe has a relatively well-developed infrastructure. • Vilnius 2020 >> • The Central and Eastern European Freight Transport Sector is leaded by the road haulage. • Major Industrial Sectors: Automotive, fast moving consumer goods (FMCG) / Retail, Healthcare / Pharmaceutical, High Tech Electronics GDP Growth in Central and Eastern Europe is mainly driven by foreign investment and consumption of foreign goods
The transportation and logistics market • Almost all main transport players in market come from Western Europe and the US. • The local know-how, plants and equipments have not yet catched up with European standards • Road Networks, Customs Issues, Security Issues need to be improved. • But transportation and logistic costs are almost as high as in Western Europe. • Each unveiling of an hypermarket is celebrated by hours of queues of avid consumers.
Opportunities for US firms in offering logistic services • The distribution sector is very atomized. • Logistics and transportation is a priority for the EU. • Thanks to a strategic location and buoyant local economies, the logistics and transportation sector of most Central and Eastern European countries is growing rapidly • Local companies urgently need assistance from the West with a comprehensive updating of equipments/technologies and restructuring their organization.
More information… www.centreurope.orgEast-west business portal