|

THE
MYTH OF THE PLATFORM COMPANY
Thoughts on GaveKal's
Our Brave New World
by Robert Blumen
August 13, 2007
Does the decline
of US manufacturing and the growing trade deficit portend a
collapse of the dollar? Or are we in a brave new world in which
countries with developed financial markets produce nothing, have
no physical capital, run permanent trade deficits, and pay for
it all with perpetually over-valued financial assets? The
latter, according to Charles Gave, Louis Gave, and Anatole
Kaletsky (GaveKal) as told in their book Our
Brave New World.
The
authors believe that many seemingly problematic features of the
global economy can be understood as consequences of the growth
of a new breed of companies. There “platform” companies come
into being through the restructuring of existing companies. What
starts out as an integrated manufacturing firm eventually
divides into two specialized firms. The company first relocates
its manufacturing operation offshore, typically to China and
then spins off the offshore manufacturing arm entirely. What’s
left, ex-manufacturing, is a “platform company”, a firm
whose business is to buy finished goods and then to provide
marketing, distribution, branding, and retailing.
The
authors believe the growth of these companies explains the more
or less permanent advantage that the developed world has over
emerging economies. Their argument can be summarized as
follows:
1. The global economy is divided into two sectors:
manufacturing (located in China); and platforms company
economies (the developed world).
2. The process of reorganizing a firm into a platform
company is a model that can be adopted by firms in the developed
world.
3. As more firms make this transition, the developed
nations are becoming Platform
Company Economies.
4. Platform companies earn a high return on
investment, while manufacturing firms earn a low return on
investment. This permanent returns differential accounts for a
sustainable higher standard of living for those in the platform
nations.
It
is not clear that the trade deficit as such is a problem. While
the arguments offered by the trade deficit gloom and doomers
overstate the problem, if there is one, the solution offered in
Our Brave New World, while provocative, is even worse.
In the next section I will elaborate the authors’ theory of
superior sustainable returns, and then follow with some more
detailed arguments against them.
The
Competitive Process and the Platform Model
What
reason do the authors give for the sustainability of a higher
rate of profit for platform companies? Platform companies earn a
high return primarily because they don’t have much capital.
Capital, serves no particularly useful purpose, and ensures that
its owner will realize low returns. Getting rid of capital
liberates firms to focus on high-margin portions of the value
chain. The authors believe that the branding, marketing,
retailing and the development of intellectual property are
inherently high return activities because they don’t use much
physical capital.
This
essay will attempt to criticize GaveKal’s view from a
viewpoint of Austrian
Economics. The article does not assume an extensive
background in Austrian Economics, but as a preliminary, it is
important to clarify the Austrian concept of economic profit.
The Austrian school views is that firms on average will earn an accounting
profit equal to the normal rate of interest. Austrian
economics does not count this normal return as profit, though
accountants would do so. Austrian economics uses the terms
profit (and loss) (or better, economic
profit) to mean any return greater than or (less than).
As Rothbard
explains,
[there
is a tendency for] realized profit [returns above the rate of
interest - RB] tends to disappear because of the entrepreneurial
actions it generates. The basic rate, then, is the rate of
interest, which does not disappear. If we start with a dynamic
economy, and if we postulate given value scales and given
original factors and technical knowledge throughout, the result
will be a wiping out of profits to reach an [equilibrium] with a
pure interest rate.
Austrians
see profits and losses as a temporary phenomenon, indicating
mal-adjustment between supply, demand, and price. The reason
that profits (losses) are temporary is that entrepreneurs are
constantly attracted to profit opportunities and averse to
losses. As they profits or losses are realized in a sector or
industry, entrepreneurs enter or leave the sector; they buy and
sell factors of production, and then increase or contract
outputs, until price differentials narrow, and ultimately,
profits and losses are eliminated
The
higher return that the authors attribute to platform companies
would be an economic profit. Their thesis, put in alternative
terminology, is that platform companies earn a permanent
economic profit by from being platform companies. The main point
of my criticism is that the sources of competitive advantage
that the authors attribute to platform companies are not
inherent in the platform idea and are not
invulnerable to competition.
Splitting
off the capital structure platform of a firm would expose its
retailing business to competition by other retailers. Without a
capital structure, the startup costs for a competitor are
decreased; there is nothing preventing other similar retailers
from simply buying the same manufactured inputs from the same
supplier in China and then competing on branding and retailing.
For that matter, there is nothing to prevent the independent
manufacturing firm in China that owns the capital from expanding
down the value chain and competing with the platform company on
retailing.
If
capital-lite service, IP, or branding resulted in economic
profits, why would not entrepreneurs in the developing world
start such companies as well? Japan and Korea, both of which
began their industrialization process providing cheap
manufactured goods and have since expanded up the value chain.
There are many well-educated people in both China and India who
can form service-oriented companies. Zack’s equity research,
for example, produces high-quality research reports using equity
analysts in Mumbai.
Do the Math
One
of the ways that the authors try to show that less capital
intensive processes yield higher returns is with a simple –
and incorrect – mathematical argument. Let’s look in detail
at how they do this.
The
ratio of profits to the cost of investment is a measure of
profitability that can be used to compare different firms. This
is the ratio tends to be equalized by the competitive process
that Rothbard describes. In other words, on the market, there is
a tendency for every unit of invested funds to earn the same
return.
In
Our Brave New World we read that a firm in the developed
world will increase this ratio by getting rid of its capital.
Their argument is based on the observation that capital is in
the denominator of the ratio, so having less of it reduces the
denominator [p.88]. However, shrinking the denominator of a
ratio only increases the ratio only if the numerator is held
constant. If the numerator decreases by the same amount as the
denominator, than the ratio stays the same. The ratio could even
fall if the numerator decreased by more than the
denominator.
Does
getting rid of capital increase or decrease the revenues of a
firm? If capital had no relation to a company’s profits, then
having less of it would be good and none of it best. But capital
is not a blob; it consists of specific goods that each makes a
unique contribution to the output of the firm. The problem with
GaveKal’s argument is that it ignores the economic function of
capital within a firm. Economic historian Sudha Shenoy
emphasizes that capital and skilled labor are interdependent;
“the capital has to be combined with the appropriate
skills…There’s an awful lot of ‘tacit knowledge’ inside
firms -- passed on as ‘the way things are done’.”
It may be impossible to separate the individual functions of a
firm from its capital.
The
following example illustrates this dependence between capital
and output. A financial analyst for a hedge fund might, looking
at his personal balance sheet over the course of a week,
conclude that working at his job is a high-return activity
because that is the only thing generating revenues, while
eating, sleeping, and exercise are low return activities. After
consulting from GaveKal’s research firm, the poor fellow
decides to spin off his body. The body is shipped to China where
he is able to outsource eating, sleeping, and exercise, by
hiring Chinese workers to perform those functions for him.
Meanwhile, his mind has become a platform company. The mind can
work 24 hours a day (analyzing the shares of platform
companies).
A
friend of mine works for a large integrated firm consisting of a
consultancy and several manufacturing divisions. The firm was
formed in a merger in which the manufacturing firm purchased
what was a pure consultancy. (How could the author’s model
account for “reverse platform” mergers such as this?) In my
friend’s view, his firm has a competitive advantage over pure
consultant firms because it can single-source an entire solution
for its customers and manage supply risk.
The
book offers as an example of a capital-lite company the former
Marriott hotel chain [p.7]. Marriott has spun off its hotel
properties to a REIT
and become a hotel servicing company. Should we expect the hotel
“platform” company to offer higher returns than a hotel
chain because it no longer has the burden of costly capital? Not
necessarily. Why would the company that now owns the physical
hotels not take competing bids from various management firms,
driving down the price of hotel management services? Unless
something very special distinguishes the Marriott service
company other hotel service companies, there is no permanent
source of profits to be derived from this organizational
structure. On the contrary, it could be a disastrous decision.
The
New York Times
recently covered the
emergence of hypoallergenic hotel rooms. According to the
article, a clean hotel room is no longer a differentiating
factor: “If all you’ve got is good service and ‘Gee my
room was clean’ – well, you kind of expect that today.”
The new super-clean rooms require capital expenditures of around
$30,000 per room for replacing carpets with hardwood floors,
improving ventilation, supplying dust mite-proof pillowcases,
and other changes. The rooms also require additional hotel labor
for improved cleaning procedures. Hotels have found that they
can charge a premium for them and have higher occupancy for
them.
This
story illustrates how hotel management learned about the
preferences of hotel customers – including what type of
capital is necessary to earn profits – by operating hotels.
Hotel management got the idea after receiving a lot of requests
for special cleaning procedures and materials from certain
sensitive guests. The contributions to returns of management,
labor and fixed capital are interdependent and easily separated.
A hotel company that owned its fixed capital is in a better
position than a service company to provide super-clean rooms.
Capital
is expensive but capital-intensive firms do not necessarily earn
low returns. A large structure of accumulated capital and an
integrated supply chain can constitute a significant barrier to
entry if the capital is costly or difficult for competitors to
reproduce or operate. Shenoy gives
the example of German chemical firms who lost their American
fixed capital to confiscation during both wars, but emerged as
the leading firms in the post war environments when American
firms who took it over were not able operate it as efficiently.
Are
brand-dependent businesses likely to earn higher returns?
Branding is quite costly. Developing a brand requires a
considerable investment in marketing, and a superior product. Toyota,
for example, has a reputation as a good value for a dependable
car. But this is only after having invested billions of dollars
the capital to create in high-quality manufacturing
processes.
Survivor Bias
GaveKal
believe that the platformization trend that is gaining momentum
in the developed world. Management will increasingly realize
that following this trend will enable their
firm to match the high returns earned by those others that have
already made the move. If the platform model works then should
we expect that more firms will benefit by adopting it? “No”,
for reasons that I will explain.
While
the authors can point to the leading firms in various sectors of
the US economy that appear to fit the description of a platform
company, it is more than likely that the superior returns earned
by those firms does not come from this characteristic.
GaveKal
are guilty of survivor
bias in attributing the success of today’s leading
“platform companies” to their organizational form. The total
return on investment within an economy must be measured over the
sector as whole, which includes the economic losses realized by
all of the losses that result either within the same company or
among competitors.
The
authors’ error is that they take a snapshot of a world in flux
and treat it as if it were fixed. The leading firms in any
industry are the survivors of a competitive process in which
many firms failed, losing some or all of their invested funds.
Not all restructurings – platform or otherwise – will be
successful and some investor lost money on each and every one
the firms that no longer exists. As Rothbard
observes:
A
grave error is made by a host of writers and economists in
considering only profits in the economy. Almost no account is
taken of losses. The economy should not be characterized as a
“profit economy,” but as a “profit and loss economy.”
Consider
a drug company that can manufacture a drug for $1 per does and
sell it for $50. Does this firm earn high returns on capital?
That depends on how many prospective drug trails failed in order
to find one that worked. After having invested large sums to
create their capital (or intellectual property), some firms can
be in a position where returns measured from that point forward
are higher than average. That is because their capital cannot be
reproduced without a similar investment, either the expense of
building a large plant or the expense of doing many drug trials.
There is not a low-cost way for firms to jump ahead to the point
where returns are realized without first making the investment.
And if there were then everyone would, and the superior return
that would get competed away.
The
authors commit fallacy
of composition in thinking that a particular firm can
increase its returns by transforming into a platform company.
This fallacy arises when through the confusion between relative
and absolute advantages. An absolute advantage is one that
benefits anyone who adopts it, regardless of what others do.
Tooth brushing regularly is an example. A relative advantage is
gained by improving the position of the part within the whole.
For example, everyone can cut in line, but not everyone will end
up at the front of the line. What happens instead is that some
people cut ahead of other people, but there is still only one
person at the front. Radio personality Garrison
Keillor made the same point in speaking of the
town of Lake Wobegon, Minnesota, “where all the children
are above average.”
What
does this have to do with platform companies? Looking at only
the survivors makes it appear that becoming a platform company
is an absolute advantage, while in fact the successful ones have
gained a relative advantage by imposing a relative disadvantage
on their competitors. Economic profit, as discussed above, is a
relative advantage. On average, firms earn zero economic profit;
the economic profits of
some firms are earned at the expense of losses made by other firms. The profits of a single firm are evidence that it
has attained a relative advantage, in relation to its
competitors. The more firms that attempted to earn profits by
adopting the platform model, the more that competition among
platform companies would eliminate those profits.
Conclusion
The
main problem of the book is that the authors look at the result
of the competitive market process as if it could be achieved
through organizational structure alone. But business
organization can't be standardized in this way. Some firms will
realize more value by integrating a greater portion of their
supply chain within a single firm, while for others, the
opposite will be true. The best organizational structure for any
firm comes from a trade-off between keeping that part of the
production process they do best inside the firm against the
advantages of purchasing the same good at lowest cost from an
supplier in a competitive external market.
Organizational
models can be useful, but any model will work some of the time
and not other times. Permanent economic profits cannot be
realized by adopting a model. It takes superior entrepreneurial
judgment to apply the right model at the right time. There
cannot be such a thing as an organizational model providing
permanent economic profits, because organizing a firm is an
exercise of entrepreneurship. While there can be platform
companies, there is no such thing as a platform model, nor a
platform company economy.
Resources:
GaveKal is the moniker
of the economic consultancy founded by Charles Gave,
Louis-Vincent Gave, and Anatole Kaletsky and is credited as the
author of their book. The basics of their theory are laid out in
a recent and largely uncritical Dec 25 2006 Barron’s
magazine cover story, Welcome
to Sizzle, Inc.,
and in an
interview on the Financial
Sense News Hour.
For a contrary view see the following by economic historian
Sudha Shenoy: The
Case Against Neo-Protectionism (mp3), The
New Global Marketplace (mp3), The
Division of Labor is World-Wide, and ‘Is
America Living Beyond its Means?’ -- Is That the Right
Question?, and Foreigners
and those Vast Dollar Holdings. For another contrary view
that directly addresses some of Schiff’s points, see Trade
Deficits and Fiat Currencies, Trade
Deficits and Collectivism and Isn't
the Capital Surplus a Good Thing? by economist Robert
Murphy.
This differs from the accounting use of the term, which counts
what Austrians would call “interest” as net income, or
accounting profit.
Accounting profit is the differential between revenues and
costs. Austrian economists break this into two parts. They
attribute the average return on all investment throughout the
economy (which they don’t call profit) to interest, which
comes from time preference. Profits (losses) are any earnings
above (below) the average rate and are due to entrepreneurial
foresight (error).
Private email.
Sudha Shenoy, The
New Global Marketplace.

© 2007 Robert Blumen
Editorial Archive
|

|
Robert
Blumen is an independent software developer based in San Francisco,
California
Email |
|