Economic geographical analysis of the Finnish paper industry
: Hämäläinen Esa
Publisher: Turun yliopisto
: Turku, Finland
: 2011
: 978-951-29-4744-7
: 978-951-29-4745-4
The purpose of this academic economic geographical dissertation is to study and describe
how competitiveness in the Finnish paper industry has developed during 2001–
2008. During these years, the Finnish paper industry has faced economically challenging
times. This dissertation attempts to fill the existing gap between theoretical and
empirical discussions concerning economic geographical issues in the paper industry.
The main research questions are: How have the supply chain costs and margins developed
during 2001–2008? How do sales prices, transportation, and fixed and variable
costs correlate with gross margins in a spatial context?
The research object for this case study is a typical large Finnish paper mill that exports
over 90 % of its production. The economic longitudinal research data were obtained
from the case mill’s controlled economic system and, correlation (R2) analysis
was used as the main research method. The time series data cover monthly economic
and manufacturing observations from the mill from 2001 to 2008.
The study reveals the development of prices, costs and transportation in the case
mill, and it shows how economic variables correlate with the paper mills’ gross margins
in various markets in Europe. The research methods of economic geography offer perspectives
that pay attention to the spatial (market) heterogeneity. This type of research
has been quite scarce in the research tradition of Finnish economic geography and supply
chain management. This case study gives new insight into the research tradition of
Finnish economic geography and supply chain management and its applications.
As a concrete empirical result, this dissertation states that the competitive advantages
of the Finnish paper industry were significantly weakened during 2001–2008 by low
paper prices, costly manufacturing and expensive transportation. Statistical analysis exposed
that, in several important markets, transport costs lower gross margins as much
as decreasing paper prices, which was a new finding. Paper companies should continuously
pay attention to lowering manufacturing and transporting costs to achieve more
profitable economic performance. The location of a mill being far from markets clearly
has an economic impact on paper manufacturing, as paper demand is decreasing and
oversupply is pressuring paper prices down. Therefore, market and economic forecasting
in the paper industry is advantageous at the country and product levels while simultaneously
taking into account the economic geographically specific dimensions.