Strategic Sourcing in Banking - A Framework

The banking landscape in Europe and Germany has a polypolistic market structure with an average vertical range of integration of 80%, implying high process redundancies. Accumulating processes for standardized products is one way to achieve efficiency improvements. “Smart sourcing” can change the production mix of banks lead to a concentration of processes. A challenge is the lack of consistent frameworks for the banking industry to systematically support the sourcing decision process. In this paper, drawing on the resource based view and transaction cost economics it is shown that, in addition to a make or buy decision, co-operation between competitors should be included into a sourcing analysis as the third alternative. To support the decision on making, buying or sharing an activity, a quantitative analysis of each activity of the banking value chain is necessary. We propose an analysis framework based on a generic banking value chain. Since the recent literature mostly focuses only on the outsourcers’ case, a formalized model is developed to consider both the objective function of the outand the insourcer. Since the market might restrict sourcing options, as there may be no providers of relevant activities, it can be shown that “sharing” as part of a co-opetition concept instead of buy or make can be a way to break up the value chain. The framework thus supports decision makers to approach an optimal degree of vertical integration for both market sides.

[1]  O. Williamson The economic institutions of capitalism , 1985 .

[2]  Kweku-Muata Osei-Bryson,et al.  Making the information systems outsourcing decision: A transaction cost approach to analyzing outsourcing decision problems , 1999, Eur. J. Oper. Res..

[3]  K. Arrow Economic Welfare and the Allocation of Resources for Invention , 1962 .

[4]  Aidan R. Vining,et al.  A conceptual framework for understanding the outsourcing decision , 1999 .

[5]  O. Williamson The Economics of Organization: The Transaction Cost Approach , 1981, American Journal of Sociology.

[6]  Detmar W. Straub,et al.  Production and Transaction Economies and IS Outsourcing: A Study of the U.S. Banking Industry , 1998, MIS Q..

[7]  C. Drury,et al.  Moving from Make/Buy to Strategic Sourcing: The Outsource Decision Process , 2001 .

[8]  S. Globerman,et al.  Markets, Hierarchies, and Innovation , 1980 .

[9]  J. R. Moore,et al.  The theory of the growth of the firm twenty-five years after , 1960 .

[10]  J. Barney,et al.  The resource-based view of the firm: Ten years after 1991 , 2001 .

[11]  O. Williamson,et al.  Markets and Hierarchies: Analysis and Antitrust Implications. , 1977 .

[12]  O. Williamson / STRATEGIZING, ECONOMIZING, AND ECONOMIC ORGANIZATION , 1991 .

[13]  Derek R. White,et al.  When and When Not to Vertically Integrate , 1993 .

[14]  B. Wernerfelt,et al.  The resource‐based view of the firm: Ten years after , 1995 .

[15]  Uday M. Apte Global Outsourcing of Information Systems and Processing Services , 1990, Inf. Soc..

[16]  Marvin B. Lieberman,et al.  DETERMINANTS OF VERTICAL INTEGRATION: AN EMPIRICAL TEST. , 1991 .

[17]  Jordi Canals Universal banks:: The need for corporate renewal , 1998 .

[18]  Ulli Arnold New dimensions of outsourcing: a combination of transaction cost economics and the core competencies concept , 2000 .

[19]  B. Klein,et al.  Vertical Integration, Appropriable Rents, and the Competitive Contracting Process , 1978, The Journal of Law and Economics.

[20]  James T. C. Teng,et al.  Theoretical perspectives on the outsourcing of information systems , 1995, J. Inf. Technol..

[21]  Ronald H. Coase,et al.  The New Institutional Economics , 1998 .

[22]  Kalevi Kyläheiko,et al.  Filling a gap in traditional transaction cost economics:: Towards transaction benefits-based analysis , 2002 .

[23]  A. W. Coats,et al.  The Principles of Political Economy and Taxation. , 1935 .

[24]  Todd R. Zenger,et al.  Testing Alternative Theories of the Firm: Transaction Cost, Knowledge-Based, and Measurement Explanations for Make-or- Buy Decisions in Information Services , 1997 .

[25]  R. Willig,et al.  Economies of scope , 1981 .

[26]  R. Hirschheim,et al.  Information systems outsourcing : myths, metaphors, and realities , 1993 .

[27]  B. Lyons Specific investment, economies of scale, and the make-or-buy decision: A test of transaction cost theory , 1995 .

[28]  W. Baumol,et al.  Contestable Markets and the Theory of Industry Structure , 1982 .

[29]  E. Tse,et al.  Defining Corporate Strengths And Weaknesses: Is It Essential for Successful Strategy Implementation? , 1988 .

[30]  Volker Stadler,et al.  ICT and operations outsourcing in banking , 2003, Wirtschaftsinf..

[31]  D. Ricardo On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation , 1891 .

[32]  Jordi Canals,et al.  Competitive strategies in European banking , 1992 .

[33]  Joseph Dorfman,et al.  Institutional Economics , 2023 .

[34]  S. Globerman,et al.  The organization of vertically related transactions in the Canadian forest products industries , 1986 .

[35]  W. Dugger The Economic Institutions of Capitalism , 1987 .

[36]  Howard H. Stevenson,et al.  Defining Corporate Strengths and Weaknesses , 1989 .

[37]  J. Barney Firm Resources and Sustained Competitive Advantage , 1991 .

[38]  G. Stigler The Division of Labor is Limited by the Extent of the Market , 1951, Journal of Political Economy.

[39]  A. Zaheer,et al.  Relational governance as an interorganizational strategy: An empirical test of the role of trust in economic exchange , 1995 .

[40]  R. Coase The Nature of the Firm , 1937 .