- Title
- Relational capital, supply chain integration and firm performance in the Vietnamese coffee industry
- Creator
- Hoang, Lam Cuong
- Relation
- University of Newcastle Research Higher Degree Thesis
- Resource Type
- thesis
- Date
- 2020
- Description
- Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
- Description
- The objective of this thesis is to examine the impact of relational capital sub-dimensions of trust, commitment and dependence on supply chain integration (SCI) and firm performance in the Vietnamese coffee industry. Supply chains (SCs), a network of activities between a firm and its suppliers, are becoming increasingly complex in the ever-changing and unpredictable global marketplace. Understanding the dynamics of the relationship between firms and suppliers is therefore critical for improving firm performance. Following the global financial crisis (GFC), policymakers and businesses are interested in discerning how trust, commitment and dependence influences SCI and firm performance, and this has generated intense scrutiny in policy discourse and academia. This is important within the context of agricultural SCs, which have received very little empirical investigation due to complex agricultural practices and the lack of a comprehensive data set. This study aims to bridge this knowledge gap by empirically investigating the linkage between relational capital dimensions of trust, commitment and dependence on SCI and SCI on firm performance. Further, with the view that SCI’s contribution to firm performance is influenced by the external environment in which the supply chain is embedded, the study explores the nature and moderating effect of environmental uncertainty (supply uncertainty and government policy uncertainty) on the SCI – firm performance nexus, based on the agricultural SC in the Vietnamese coffee industry. A structural equation model (SEM) and multi-group analysis were implemented to analyse survey data of 349 growers and roasters of coffee in Vietnam. SPSS 20 and AMOS 20 software packages were used to conduct a range of statistical analyses, comprising exploratory factor analysis (EFA), confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and SEM. Multi-group analysis was used to test for moderating effects of environmental uncertainty on the SCI – firm performance nexus. SEM was conducted to compare between groups to discover whether environmental uncertainty may moderate the relationships between the constructs under study. The empirical results reveal three main findings. First, the SEM results show that trust, commitment and dependence are positively associated with SCI. Second, the results show that SCI is positively associated with firm performance, both in terms of cost performance and service performance. The empirical results based on multi-group analysis and use of control variables also show that company characteristics such as firm type, firm size and firm age do not affect relationships in the research concept framework. Third, while supply uncertainty has an adverse effect on the SCI – firm performance nexus, government policies uncertainty has no statistically significant effect on this. The empirical findings have important implications from a theoretical, empirical and policy perspective. In terms of theoretical contributions, first, this thesis offers strong empirical evidence to support the view that relational capital enhances SCI. The next finding is that the most important relational capital influencing SCI is trust, followed by commitment and dependence, in that order. This finding is investigated in a developing country context, Vietnam, for which no previous research has been recorded in the literature. This contributes to verifying theory in different contexts. Second, the results report that SCI enables firm performance in the context of growing controversy about this in the literature. Third, the empirical results of the thesis support the theoretical view that the SCI – firm performance nexus is influenced by environmental uncertainty. However, the findings of mixed support for the proposed model reveal that the SCI – firm performance nexus is affected depending on the type of environmental uncertainty in which it is embedded – supply uncertainty has a negative impact on this nexus, but there is no evidence of this for government policy uncertainty. This contributes to perspectives on the moderating effects of the environment in SCI research. From a managerial perspective, the thesis contributes to the understanding of SCI. First, the results highlight the need for improving relational capital of trading partners in the coffee industry in Vietnam. Second, the results lead to a policy implication that to effectively develop the Vietnamese coffee industry, SCI should be strongly promoted. Successful SCI is a solid foundation for the development of Vietnam’s coffee industry. In terms of policy implications, based on the results of the study on the negative impacts of supply uncertainty on the SCI – firm performance nexus, from a public policy perspective, it is necessary to develop policies to stabilise coffee supply, such as policies to encourage the development of coffee growing, policies to raise farmers’ knowledge about science, technology and the economy, and policies to increase credit for farmers. This will ensure a stable supply of coffee, allowing SCI to bring higher efficiency for the coffee industry.
- Subject
- supply chain management; coffee industry; Vietnam; supply chain integration
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1412161
- Identifier
- uon:36435
- Rights
- Copyright 2020 Lam Cuong Hoang
- Language
- eng
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