TY - JOUR
T1 - Building the Social Structure of a Market
AU - McKague, Kevin
AU - Zietsma, Charlene
AU - Oliver, Christine
N1 - Funding Information:
We studied the efforts of CARE, an international federation of NGOs initially founded in 1945 to combat global poverty, in a project designed to make the dairy value chain in Bangladesh a more inclusive, productive market with better outcomes for the poor. In line with a report entitled Making Markets Work for the Poor and consistent with other NGOs and aid agencies (), CARE had initiated several market-based value chain projects that included supporting micro-entrepreneurs, helping establish village savings and loans groups, arranging for small Kenyan farmers to aggregate vegetables and sell to UK supermarkets, and connecting coffee producer cooperatives to international buyers (). In Bangladesh, CARE’s Rural Sales Program, launched in 2004, partnered with the Bata Shoe Company to train very poor women to sell shoes door-to-door in rural areas that were beyond the reach of Bata’s existing distribution networks (). Other products were added and 3,000 women across the country earned their living this way. The successful project was spun off as a separate business, attracting social investment. In 2007, CARE received US$5.25 million in funding from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation for a four-year project entitled “Strengthening the Dairy Value Chain in Bangladesh.” The grant was later extended to six years, and then an additional US$3.8 million over three years was awarded from 2013 to 2015. CARE Bangladesh was, therefore, an appropriate case to study market and value chain development in the context of a least developed economy.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, © The Author(s) 2015.
PY - 2015/8/25
Y1 - 2015/8/25
N2 - Motivated by the question of how to develop viable new markets and value chains in the resource-constrained settings of least developed countries, we adopted multi-year qualitative methods to examine the intervention of a nongovernmental organization (NGO) in developing the dairy value chain in Bangladesh. Consistent with the theoretical premise that markets and value chains are social orders, we found that the NGO’s success relied on building the social structure of a market wherein market participants could negotiate relationships and norms of production and exchange and embed them in practices and technologies. To establish social structure among participants as a means of market building, the NGO acquired relevant knowledge, then used contextual bridging (transferring new meanings, practices and structures into a given context in a way that is sensitive to the norms, practices, knowledge and relationships that exist in that context), brokering relationships along the value chain (facilitating introductions and exchanges between value chain members) and funding experimentation (providing resources to test ideas and assumptions about new market practices). Market participants themselves also contributed to the development of the market’s social structure by means of social embedding (building relationships and negotiating norms of exchange and coordination), and material embedding (implementing technologies and practices and integrating market norms into technology). Increased productivity and equity and reduced costs of transactions resulted from the creation of a social structure that, in this case, preceded and enabled the economic structuring of a market rather than the other way around.
AB - Motivated by the question of how to develop viable new markets and value chains in the resource-constrained settings of least developed countries, we adopted multi-year qualitative methods to examine the intervention of a nongovernmental organization (NGO) in developing the dairy value chain in Bangladesh. Consistent with the theoretical premise that markets and value chains are social orders, we found that the NGO’s success relied on building the social structure of a market wherein market participants could negotiate relationships and norms of production and exchange and embed them in practices and technologies. To establish social structure among participants as a means of market building, the NGO acquired relevant knowledge, then used contextual bridging (transferring new meanings, practices and structures into a given context in a way that is sensitive to the norms, practices, knowledge and relationships that exist in that context), brokering relationships along the value chain (facilitating introductions and exchanges between value chain members) and funding experimentation (providing resources to test ideas and assumptions about new market practices). Market participants themselves also contributed to the development of the market’s social structure by means of social embedding (building relationships and negotiating norms of exchange and coordination), and material embedding (implementing technologies and practices and integrating market norms into technology). Increased productivity and equity and reduced costs of transactions resulted from the creation of a social structure that, in this case, preceded and enabled the economic structuring of a market rather than the other way around.
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U2 - 10.1177/0170840615580011
DO - 10.1177/0170840615580011
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84938837456
SN - 0170-8406
VL - 36
SP - 1063
EP - 1093
JO - Organization Studies
JF - Organization Studies
IS - 8
ER -