TY - JOUR
T1 - Sustainable global agrifood supply chains
T2 - exploring the barriers
AU - Gold, Stefan
AU - Kunz, Nathan
AU - Reiner, Gerald
N1 - Corresponding author Address correspondence to: Stefan Gold, Nottingham University Business School, International Center for Corporate Social Responsibility, North Building, Jubilee Campus, Wollaton Road, Nottingham, NG8 1BB, United Kingdom. Email: [email protected] Search for more papers by this author Nathan Kunz, Gerald Reiner The article investigates the factors that make businesses postpone integrating the performance dimension of sustainability in global agrifood supply chains.
PY - 2017/1/4
Y1 - 2017/1/4
N2 - The article investigates the factors that make businesses postpone integrating the performance dimension of sustainability in global agrifood supply chains. Based on literature-based conceptual reasoning, the article conceptualizes a double company lens distinguishing between substantial supply chain management and mere public relations endeavors as a major obstacle for businesses pursuing comprehensive supply chain performance in global agrifood chains. We point out that many supply chain performance attributes represent, in fact, credence attributes that cannot be verified by the consumer, hence entailing an information asymmetry between the company and its consumers. Rational business responses to this situation tend to focus on symbolic actions and communication efforts by means of sustainability reports and other brand-enhancing marketing tools that may be decoupled from substantial operations and supply chain improvements. The research propositions developed have partly been corroborated by a content analysis of annual and sustainability reports of four major agrifood companies (Nestle, PepsiCo, Unilever, and Mondelez International). The conceptual arguments and empirical analysis presented in the article may serve as the basis for managers and academics to develop innovative inter- and intraorganizational business processes that reconcile trade-offs between various agrifood supply chain performance dimensions, thus pushing the performance frontier outward, and that provide the necessary transparency for overcoming the currently adverse setting of incentives inherent in the food production, processing, retailing, and consumption system.
AB - The article investigates the factors that make businesses postpone integrating the performance dimension of sustainability in global agrifood supply chains. Based on literature-based conceptual reasoning, the article conceptualizes a double company lens distinguishing between substantial supply chain management and mere public relations endeavors as a major obstacle for businesses pursuing comprehensive supply chain performance in global agrifood chains. We point out that many supply chain performance attributes represent, in fact, credence attributes that cannot be verified by the consumer, hence entailing an information asymmetry between the company and its consumers. Rational business responses to this situation tend to focus on symbolic actions and communication efforts by means of sustainability reports and other brand-enhancing marketing tools that may be decoupled from substantial operations and supply chain improvements. The research propositions developed have partly been corroborated by a content analysis of annual and sustainability reports of four major agrifood companies (Nestle, PepsiCo, Unilever, and Mondelez International). The conceptual arguments and empirical analysis presented in the article may serve as the basis for managers and academics to develop innovative inter- and intraorganizational business processes that reconcile trade-offs between various agrifood supply chain performance dimensions, thus pushing the performance frontier outward, and that provide the necessary transparency for overcoming the currently adverse setting of incentives inherent in the food production, processing, retailing, and consumption system.
KW - global agrifood chains
KW - industrial ecology
KW - information asymmetry
KW - multidimensional performance
KW - supply chain management
KW - sustainability
UR - http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jiec.12440/abstract
U2 - 10.1111/jiec.12440
DO - 10.1111/jiec.12440
M3 - Article
SN - 1088-1980
VL - 21
SP - 249
EP - 260
JO - Journal of Industrial Ecology
JF - Journal of Industrial Ecology
IS - 2
ER -