Master of Science in International Procurement and Supply Management
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://dspace.griffith.ie/handle/123456789/100
Browse
Browsing Master of Science in International Procurement and Supply Management by Author "Gali, Purna Rao"
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
- Results Per Page
- Sort Options
Item Challenges for overseas firm setting up in India. An analysis from supply chain perspective.(Griffith College, 2021) Gali, Purna RaoPurpose – The purpose of the research is to explore various supply chain risks that are present in Indian context and can be seen in future as well. The research also looks to present the most effective method for treating supply chain risk management in India. Design/research methodology/approach- A non-probability purposive sampling method was deployed to conduct an online survey through Google form in different supply chain management groups in social media platforms. A total of 155 participants participated in the survey. A mono-quantitative research methodology was adopted for this research. Findings – Most of the participants work in international companies as they have mentioned the ownership for majority of companies as 100% foreign or foreign majority. It was also observed that most of the participants work for companies that have less than 200 employees which indicates the most of the companies are new or small to medium sized companies. In relation to the supply chain risks secondary research has highlighted legal challenges, tax regime, intellectual property rights, dispute resolution, strikes, riots, social unrest, and natural calamities as some of the common supply chain risks in India. However, the primary research has found that Inadequate utility infrastructure, Corruptions/Bribery, and Taxation problems have been major supply chain risk or challenges for companies since 2015. It has also found that Major accidents such as fire/explosion/collapse of infrastructure etc, Terrorism/Riots/Civil unrest, Transport related factors, Inadequate logistics infrastructure, Frauds (physical resources/theft/intellectual property etc), Labour related problems (Strikes, unskilled labour etc) and Taxation problems are the main causes of operational impact in companies in relation to supply chain and Major accidents such as fire/explosion/collapse of infrastructure etc, Terrorism/Riots/Civil unrest, Transport related factors, Inadequate logistics infrastructure, Frauds (physical resources/theft/intellectual property etc), Labour related problems (Strikes, unskilled labour etc) and Taxation problems are the major disruption factor/s that affect the supply chain in an organization in next three years in India. Originality/Value – The research adds to the previous research of supply chain risk for foreign companies looking to set up business in India by highlighting the supply chain risk that have been seen since 2015, and supply chain risk that have huge operational impact and also the supply chain risk that can be seen in future as well. The research also concludes that the most effective method for treating supply chain risk management in India cannot be designed as supply chain risk depends on external environment and also companies has to treat “supply chain security as a journey, not a destination”.