Publications /
Opinion

Back
Bringing industry 4.0 to everyone? Hold that thought…
Authors
Morten Seja
November 1, 2019

The author is an alumnus of the Atlantic Dialogues Emeging Leaders Program 2014.

The discussion on industry 4.0 (also often referred to as smart manufacturing or industrial internet of things – which is the term mostly used in the United States of America) has graduated from being a niche topic discussed (and implemented) by engineers in the world’s richest economies. If industry 4.0 has not physically arrived everywhere, it is at least in the minds of some: industry 4.0 in Africa, industry 4.0 in the food industry, industry 4.0 for medical devices, industry 4.0 in agriculture

What is industry 4.0?

There is no single definition of industry 4.0. Definitions of the term, and the technologies it includes can vary depending on the entity and use-case. The German government (which coined the term earlier this decade) defines industry 4.0 as “the intelligent networking of machines and processes for industry with the help of information and communication technology”, and the Institute for Mittelstandsforschung in Germany defines industry 4.0 more concisely as “technological integration of cyber-physical systems in the production process.” McKinsey defines industry 4.0 “as the next phase in the digitization of the manufacturing sector, driven by four disruptions: the overwhelming rise in data volumes, computational power, and connectivity, especially new low-power wide-area networks; the emergence of analytics and business-intelligence capabilities; new forms of human-machine interaction such as touch interfaces and augmented-reality systems; and improvements in transferring digital instructions to the physical world, such as advanced robotics and 3-D printing.”

Why is industry 4.0 important for frontier countries?

Even without a set definition, virtually all leading global consulting firms battle for positions as thought-leaders in the implementation of industry 4.0 solutions (see for example DeloitteErnst and YoungAccenture,  McKinsey, or Boston Consulting Group). The market for industry 4.0 solutions is large and growing. And its implementation has implications of the future development of every sector and economy. To remain relevant and competitive, most manufacturing businesses must evaluate how to effectively optimize their operations – and integrating industry 4.0 technologies is the obvious way to do so. According to Simon Weallans from Automation Alley, in the US “businesses that embrace industry 4.0 consistently see significant improvements in productivity, quality, product purchasing costs and manufacturing costs.”

This is particularly relevant for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs) that are globally the engine for employment and economic activity – especially in emerging countries. SMEs are the backbone of economies, accounting for an estimated 400 million businesses worldwide and providing 60% of jobs and contributing 40% to GDP in emerging economies

While industry 4.0 is often seen in developed countries as a mechanism for “bringing back” manufacturing jobs [1], it has the potential of eroding the advantage of enterprises—and nations hosting them—that have specialized in low-cost, low-tech, labor-intensive manufacturing activities. Some companies are reshoring their production to be closer to consumers and to harness the skilled labor force and infrastructure needed for smart production methods. Yet, this threat to frontier economies can be an opportunity for those that are able to implement new production methods – to increase resource efficiency and minimize waste by introducing smart production techniques into manufacturing. By doing so, economies can increase their productivity potential, increase incomes, and improve overall the quality of life. 

What can governments do to bring industry 4.0 solutions to SMEs?

The German government has numerous policies to incentivize and encourage industry 4.0, including a network of 25 innovation centers targeted towards SMEs. The industry 4.0 Competence Centers (Mittelstand 4.0 Kompetenzzentrum) introduce digitalization and networking technologies to German manufacturing SMEs. These centers are government-owned and run, but work hand-in-hand with private business through industry representation on boards, close collaboration through networks, and the sharing of management of certain centers with the private sector.

In France, the Alliance Industrie du Futur spreads knowledge on connectivity in production processes to domestic business, and CLARTE, a technological resources center specialized in augmented reality and other emerging technologies, provides technology consulting and research and technology transfer services to SMEs in form of a public-private partnership. Similar centers both privately run (e.g. Automation Alley in the US) and publicly run (e.g. NAMIC in Singapore) have emerged around the globe.

These physical industry 4.0 centers have a common goal: to increase companies’ global competitiveness and build innovation capacity through new, technology-driven production processes. The centers create and cultivate innovation networks, and some provide certified trainings to improve SME’s human capital. Innovation centers also help define and establish industry standards of new technologies.

Nevertheless, we need to keep in mind that each of these examples above is buttressed by a strong innovation ecosystem with a highly skilled workforce and a vibrant economy that makes the industry 4.0 centers viable. The background conditions are hardly ever similar (at least not to the same degree) in frontier economies.

What type of support models should be introduced in emerging economies?

There are more and more examples of public support for industry 4.0, such as the Technology Centre Systems Project in India, and the Export Competitiveness for Jobs project in Bangladesh. Different donors recognize the desperate need for companies in frontier economies to compete globally, including the German government through GIZ in Tunisia. Malaysia, where the government is known to provide a cornucopia of interventions to promote innovation in domestic firms, has passed a national policy on industry 4.0 and currently conducts a readiness assessment to eventually help 500 local SMEs migrate to industry 4.0 productions by 2021.

Who should receive support?

Malaysia’s readiness assessment is probably the most sensible start and a tool that can be transferred to and adapted by other economies. It will help gauge if there is a critical mass of firms ready, willing and able to introduce industry 4.0 technologies.  On top of the readiness of firms, the socio-economic background of the country as a whole must be given. There needs to be a general level of skills aptitude, adequate industry standards and financing mechanism for industry upgrading already in place. Not all firms or all sectors in every country will be able to implement industry 4.0 technologies and interventions should be targeted only towards those firms will be able to thrive. Sound economic development, as well as educational policy, need to strategically address structural gaps in management, human resource capacity and infrastructure. 

For policy makers around the world, the following simple steps could be a starting point to develop a successful intervention to support industry 4.0 for SMEs, such as the different technology centers around the world do:

- See if there are sectors that can benefit from industry 4.0 solutions, ideally being imbedded in global value chains

- Identify if there are the skills within the workforce and technical capacity in different sectors to absorb industry 4.0 (or can it easily be obtained)

- Gauge if there is an industry demand for new production methods

- Identify eventually sustainable ways to finance production method

- Review and potentially revise the regulatory environment (including the setting of industry standards) that will facilitate the uptake of industry 4.0 solutions

- Develop a government support model with your stakeholders that can reach as many capable businesses as possible (this may have to focus on few sectors or light house interventions first)

- Monitor success as well as failures of these interventions and make changes accordingly

- Promote success stories early on and share lessons learned with your peers – lessons are likely transferable between sectors.

 

1 - “Bringing back” jobs may be a popular term, but  is technically not correct since these are newly created and mostly highly skilled jobs in the manufacturing sector

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Fernando S. Perobelli
    Inácio F. Araújo
    Karina S. S. Bugarin
    December 14, 2020
    This paper explores the use of simulations in policy decision-making in the Brazilian State of São Paulo in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic. We propose a methodology for assessing the daily economic costs of control strategies for mitigating the effects of coronavirus. The method is based on the partial hypothetical extraction approach to input–output systems. Simulated daily scenarios based on different levels of compliance to the control measures are used to help guide the design o ...
  • December 10, 2020
    The purposeful dissemination of misleading or outright false information by news media and foreign state actors constitutes an increasingly important factor in both the growing erosion of trust in national institutions and political polarization in many countries around the world. The d...
  • Authors
    November 26, 2020
    The insurance sector is rapidly expanding in Africa as firms, households, and governments are increasingly becoming customers in life insurance, non-life insurance, and reinsurance markets. In 2019, Africa’s insurance premiums were valued at $68.15 billion 1 . The largest insurance markets can be found in South Africa, Kenya, Egypt, Nigeria, Algeria, Angola, and Tunisia, which together comprised 83% of all African premiums in 2019 2 . Africa’s insurance sector is often overlooked wi ...
  • November 16, 2020
    Africa is experiencing economic growth deceleration that reached 2.9% on average between 2010 and 2018, against 5.4% between 2000 and 2010. The sectoral performance of African economies depends critically on the stock and quality of infrastructure, directly as an essential input (for example, energy and transport) and indirectly by increasing total factor productivity. African economic integration, and the hoped-for emergence, can never be fully achieved with poor infrastructure, bo ...
  • Authors
    Sergio Gusmão Suchodolski
    Cinthia Helena de Oliveira Bechelaine
    Adauto Modesto Junior
    November 13, 2020
    The effective implementation of the 2030 Agenda requires a greater level of capital mobilization and new institutional arrangements that guarantee the better allocation of these funds. Based on concrete results from the experience of the Development Bank of Minas Gerais, in Brazil, this paper argues that Subnational Development Banks (SDBs) can be powerful players within development finance institutions’ networks, as their local expertise can bring efficiency and effectiveness to th ...
  • November 13, 2020
    Avec la venue de Renault à Melloussa, près de Tanger, puis de PSA à Kenitra et, demain, du Chinois BYD, à Casablanca, la filière automobile marocaine aura atteint une capacité annuelle de production de 700 000 à 1000 000 de véhicules, sous différentes marques. Ce qui fait que le Maroc est aujourd’hui le leader des modèles de Tourisme en Afrique. Cette étude rappelle les grandes étapes de cette marche de la maturité et de l'excellence, qui commence en 1959, avec la Somaca (la Société ...
  • Authors
    Inácio F. Araújo
    October 27, 2020
    We estimate the contents of services value-added incorporated in goods exports in different countries in Latin America, exploring the local dimension of the results. We use inter-regional input-output analysis to trace and map domestic value-added embedded in those countries’ exports. We add to the discussion of global value chains the internal, withincountry geography of trade in value-added, since the set of locational preferences that help understanding the spatial patterns of na ...
  • Authors
    Hugo Le picard
    October 22, 2020
    L’enjeu du développement des systèmes électriques centralisés est une priorité pour le développement économique et social de l’Afrique subsaharienne. Alors que la population subsaharienne devrait presque doubler en trente ans selon l’Organisation des Nations unies (ONU), pour atteindre 2,1milliards d’habitants en 2050, dont 1,2milliard d’urbains, le continent va devoir fournir des emplois aux jeunes qui arrivent chaque année plus nombreux sur le marché du travail. Ce sont ainsi 20mi ...
  • October 15, 2020
    It is only recently that the international community has begun referring to tackling the root causes of migration. The importance of job creation has emerged as one of the key ways to convince young people to stay in their countries of origin. However, solely creating jobs is insufficient if the jobs are vulnerable and do not pay decent wages. This policy brief provides recommendations on priority areas to ensure decent living conditions in origin countries. These priorities include ...
  • Authors
    October 2, 2020
    Africa’s infrastructure investment gap has widened over time. Addressing the mismatch between developed countries’ “global savings glut” and African countries’ “investment dearth” might be a win-win. To facilitate that matching, some risk mitigation tools can be used. In this brief, we propose that by providing such risk mitigation tools, development institutions and governments can crowd-in private investment rather than crowd them out by providing full financing. This article was ...