Title: The impact of additive manufacturing on production location decisions: a case study in Belgium and the Netherlands
Authors: Nauwelaerts Ysabel; Nevens Joren; Pauwels Lucass
Addresses: Faculty of Business and Economics, KU Leuven, H. Concienceplein 8, B-2000 ANTWERP, Belgium ' Faculty of Business and Economics, KU Leuven, H. Concienceplein 8, B-2000 ANTWERP, Belgium ' Faculty of Business and Economics, KU Leuven, H. Concienceplein 8, B-2000 ANTWERP, Belgium
Abstract: This study investigates how the implementation of additive manufacturing (AM) in production affects companies' production location decisions, a research gap present in the literature on AM and global value chains. Based on qualitative case studies at five AM manufacturing companies, active in Belgium or the Netherlands, we conclude that the implementation of AM for production activities increases the importance of access to technical knowledge, agglomeration economies, within-firm knowledge spillovers and customer proximity in production location decisions. On the other hand, AM decreases the importance of access to intermediate inputs and does not affect the importance of labour costs by shifting labour from production to pre- and post-production activities, rather than substituting it. Today, AM's overall effect on location decisions is still relatively small since technology is mostly used as a complementary production method next to traditional manufacturing, rather than as a substitute. Nevertheless, the recent pandemic crisis showed companies the risks of being dependent on supplies from remote areas, which may accelerate the implementation of AM in the future.
Keywords: additive manufacturing; 3D printing; production; location; agglomeration economies; knowledge spillovers; global value chains; GVC; Belgium; the Netherlands.
DOI: 10.1504/IJVCM.2022.125858
International Journal of Value Chain Management, 2022 Vol.13 No.3, pp.297 - 318
Received: 08 Jul 2020
Accepted: 09 Sep 2021
Published online: 30 Sep 2022 *