Review of Strategic Agility: A Holistic Framework for Fresh Produce Supply Chain Disruptions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Foundations of Agility in Supply Chains
2.1. Horticulture Exports Supply Chain and COVID-19 Pandemic
- i.
- “disruptions in international trade, stemming from an increase in trade costs due to restrictions in international mobility and quarantine measures, or stemming from trade policy measures, such as export taxes and bans, in response to the crisis.”
- ii.
- “decline in on-farm labour, stemming from workers being unwilling or unable to work due to contamination risk and various containment measures, leading to reductions in land productivity and declining agricultural output.”
- iii.
- “decline in productivity and farm output, caused by disruptions in distribution channels and in the provision of capital inputs and services. Effects likely differ with the type of product, and the structure and organization of supply chains.”
2.2. Horticulture Exports Supply Chain Monitoring and Evaluation
2.3. A Theoretical Lens for Supply Chain Agility
- The managed system: The supply chain actors with specified roles in the supply chain and their required infrastructure [71], which can be viewed from three levels: network design, facility design, and resource characteristics.
- The managing system: This component plans, controls and coordinates the business processes in the supply chain to ensure the realization of the logistical objectives within the limitations of the supply chain configuration and strategic supply chain objectives [72].
- The information system: This component provides and coordinates the information for the managing system for decision-making and control of actions.
- The organisation structure: This component comprises two main elements [73]: the establishment of tasks and their coordination to realize set objectives.
- Agility drivers: These are internal or external factors in the business environment influencing the required level of business agility. Zhang and Sharifi [55] (p. 498) define “agility drivers as changes/pressures from the business environment that necessitate a company to search for new ways of running its business in order to maintain its competitiveness”.
- Specification of redesign variables (capabilities): These are the essential capabilities variable needed by the company in order to respond positively to utilising the business environment changes.
- Agility gaps: Agility gaps arise when the firm has difficulty in acquiring the level of agility to respond to business environment changes in a timely and cost-effective manner.
- Agility enablers: Agility enablers are the required variables for a business to enhance its strategic agility. The model presents enablers of supply chain actors and supply chain strategic agility.
- Supply chain performance: Supply chain performance is the level at which a supply chain fulfils end-user requirements based on performance indicators and the given total cost to the supply chain [46].
- Agility redesign variable: This is management decisions at the strategic level that determines one of the logistic concept components of the supply chain (managed, managing, information system and organisation structure).
3. Scenarios for Comparing the Applicability of Strategic Agility under Both Stable and Turbulent COVID-19 Business Environments
3.1. Ghanaian Fresh Pineapple Supply Chain to Europe
3.2. Supply Chain Agility as a Methodological Framework in a Stable (Pre-COVID-19) and Turbulent (COVID-19) Business Environments
3.3. Propositions
4. Concluding Remarks and Contributions
4.1. Contribution to Practice
4.2. Implication for Research
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Managed System | Managing System | Information System | Organization |
---|---|---|---|
Network design Facility design Resource and product characteristics | Hierarchical decision levels Type of decision making Position of the Customer order decoupling point (CODP) Level of coordination
| Transactional IT systems Analytical IT systems | Division of tasks Division of authority and responsibilities. |
Supply Chain Management Concept Component | Elements of The Supply Chain Components Requiring Agility |
---|---|
Managed System (Infrastructure) (MDS) | Cold chain infrastructure_(MDS 1) |
Post-harvest infrastructure_(MDS2) | |
Packaging material (e.g., pallets, cartons)_(MDS3) | |
Field infrastructure for production_(MDS4) | |
Field infrastructure for labour_(MDS5) | |
Internal logistics infrastructure (e.g., transport)_(MDS6) | |
External logistics infrastructure (e.g., shipping, air)_(MDS7) | |
Road infrastructure_(MDS8) | |
Environment (e.g., taxes, regulation)_(MDS9) | |
Production infrastructure_(MDS10) | |
Input suppliers (e.g., fertilizers, pesticides)_(MDS11) | |
Planting material production_(MDS12) | |
Distribution network design_(MDS13) | |
Product varieties_(MDS14) | |
Land for production_(MDS15) | |
Irrigation facilities_(MDS16) | |
Managing System (Management) (MGS) | Management structure_(MGS1) |
Management Systems_(MGS2) | |
Decision Making_(MGS3) | |
Level of coordination in the organization_(MGS4) | |
Level of coordination in the supply chain_(MGS5) | |
Information System (INS) | Information exchange system_(INS1) |
Electronic information systems_(INS2) | |
Electronic information management_(INS3) | |
Databases on markets and competition_(INS4) | |
Standardized information system for supply chain integration _(INS5) | |
Organization (ORG) | Definition of organizational logistical objectives_(ORG1) |
Definition of supply chain logistical objectives_(ORG2) | |
Definition of organizational logistical performance indicators_(ORG3) | |
Definition of supply chain logistical performance indicators_(ORG4) | |
Training of staff (internal and external)_(ORG5) |
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Yawson, D.E.; Yamoah, F.A. Review of Strategic Agility: A Holistic Framework for Fresh Produce Supply Chain Disruptions. Sustainability 2022, 14, 14977. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142214977
Yawson DE, Yamoah FA. Review of Strategic Agility: A Holistic Framework for Fresh Produce Supply Chain Disruptions. Sustainability. 2022; 14(22):14977. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142214977
Chicago/Turabian StyleYawson, David Eshun, and Fred A. Yamoah. 2022. "Review of Strategic Agility: A Holistic Framework for Fresh Produce Supply Chain Disruptions" Sustainability 14, no. 22: 14977. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142214977
APA StyleYawson, D. E., & Yamoah, F. A. (2022). Review of Strategic Agility: A Holistic Framework for Fresh Produce Supply Chain Disruptions. Sustainability, 14(22), 14977. https://doi.org/10.3390/su142214977