Technical-Economical Competitiveness of Food Industry
Résumé
In the literature, different definitions of competitiveness exist. The EU
Commission (2003) uses as a definition of competitiveness: the ability of an
economy to provide its population with high and rising standards of living
and a high level of employment for all those willing to work, on a
sustainable basis‖. Another definition which is more focused on the
manufacturing (Lall, 2001) sectors states: competitiveness in industrial
activities means developing relative efficiency along with sustainable
growth. According to Canada‘s Agri-Food competitiveness Task Force
competitiveness is defined as: the sustained ability to profitably gain and
maintain market share (Martin, Westgren &van Duren, 1991; Fischer and
Schornberg, 2007).
At the firm level, the view of competitiveness can be given as (Buckley,
et al., 1988): A firm is competitive if it can produce products and services
of superior quality and lower costs than its domestic and international
competitors.
This paper presents a new approach of technical-economical
competitiveness for food industry, and a new type of competitive
management of them, so that their technical-economical performance be
maximized.
Collections
- 2014 fascicula14 nr1 [16]