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Car Futures - Rethinking the automotive industry beyond the American model
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In the wake of the collapse of GM and Chrysler and many of their suppliers, Trend Tracker's latest report - by auto industry academics Dr Paul Nieuwenhuis and Dr Peter Wells of Cardiff Business School - forecasts radical reshaping of the global car industry.
No conventional management report, Car Futures - Rethinking the automotive industry beyond the American model - is aimed at policy makers, academics, environmental NGOs, and of course, the industry itself. The authors say, We hope to shock all of these interest groups at least some of the time as a contribution to the reconstruction of what remains a vital industry.
Drawing on the history of the auto industry since mass production began in Detroit, the authors argue that the crisis of the once-'Big Three' (GM, Ford, Chrysler) has put in question the whole American business model, copied worldwide, that once underpinned their dominance.
They write in the report's Executive Summary, There is a mistaken belief among car manufacturers that their activity is the be all and end all of automobility. While there is no car market without somebody making a car, there is no business without somebody making money, and that is where car makers seem to be missing a trick or two. Manufacturers only capture a limited slice of the total automotive value chain.
New business models for the future would need to capture more of that value chain by integrating assembly, distribution and aftercare. This kind of thinking could also ultimately lead to a more sustainable car industry in economic, social and environmental terms. The current recession with its attendant credit crunch may well accelerate this process of industrial transformation. Many current players have proved to be ill-adapted to the 21st century automotive ecosystem. We may see some radically new business models emerge within the next 10 or 20 years.
Besides preparing readers for the future, Car Futures - Rethinking the automotive industry beyond the American model also provides the historical information and economic and technical data to help understand how the auto industry became the problematical phenomenon it now is, commanding big subsidies to support overcapacity while its global environmental footprint is still growing.
The 100 A4 pages of Car Futures - Rethinking the automotive industry beyond the American model include 28 tables, charts and photos.
Until midnight on 20 November, Trend Tracker is offering the Car Futures PDF + book package at a special launch price £55.00 + VAT
Thereafter an electronic PDF download is priced at £49.00 + VAT, while this PDF together with a printed and wire-bound soft cover copy is priced at £69.00 + VAT, inclusive of inland/surface despatch.
Dr Paul Nieuwenhuis AffIMI and Dr. Peter Wells are co-directors of the globally influential Centre for Automotive Industry Research at Cardiff Business School, one of the few academic centres globally to study the sector and its broader economic and environmental impacts.
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