Michael Schwartz, "The Rise of Chrysler in Old Detroit,," Enterprise and Society 1 (no. 1, March 2000), 63-99. (original) (raw)

Michael Schwartz and Andrew Fish, "Just-in-Time Inventories in Old Detroit," Business History 40 (#3, July 1998), 48-71.

For most scholars the key element that distinguished the flexible and efficient Toyota automobile manufacturing system from the inflexible and inefficient mass production systems in Detroit could be found in the tight coupling between part manufacturing and final assembly. And the linchpin of this tight coupling was the just-in-time inventory systems that brought these parts to the assemblers without either production interruption of expensive stock piles. We demonstrate that these features of Toyotaism were also central features to the Detroit production culture before World War II, and that they conferred the same flexibility and efficiency on the pre-World War II automobile industry. The inefficient system that could not compete with Toyotaism in the 1970s was actually constructed after World War II.

Just-in-Time Inventories in Old Detroit

1998

Just-in-time inventories have been portrayed as the centerpiece of the flexible production system developed by Toyota, and the key element in outperforming the mass production systems utilized in the United States. We demonstrate that just-in-time inventories--and other elements of flexible production--were pioneered by the US auto industry in the first part of the 20th century; were the key elements in making Detroit the global capital of auto production, and were abandoned by Detroit just as Toyota was copying the system in Japan.

ANGLO-AMERICAN COOPERATION IN THE MALAYAN AUTOMOBILE MARKET BEFORE THE PACIFIC WAR

This article examines the relationship between American automobile multinational enterprises (MNEs) and British merchant firms in Malaya from the early twentieth century until 1942. American automobile MNEs forged a strategic relationship with British merchant firms in Malaya beginning in the early twentieth century. The “Big Three” automobile MNEs in the United States (US), namely Ford, General Motors (GM), and Chrysler formed dealership agreements with the two largest British merchant firms in Malaya – the Australian Wearne Brothers (for Ford) and the British Borneo Motors Company Ltd (for GM and Chrysler). Although Ford and GM chose to internalise their distribution in the mid-1920s in Singapore and the Dutch East Indies (DEI), respectively, the services of British merchant firms as major distributors of American automobiles in Malaya remained intact throughout the period.

The Deindustrialization of Detroit

This is the final draft version of an essay that was published last year (2017) in Joel Stone, ed., Detroit 1967: Origins, Impacts, Legacies (Detroit, MI: Wayne State University Press, 2017), 67-75.