Is Lean Manufacturing a practical application of Austrian economic theory?
Having followed Austrian economics and especially the audio lectures for a couple of years I was wondering what the relationship with lean manufacturing and its underlying ideas would be. My interest stems from being a consultant/trainer for lean thinking and lean manufacturing myself. What actually triggered the question for the relationship is the importance of value in both Austrian economics and lean manufacturing as well some other issues that may somehow interface.
The main principles of lean manufacturing / lean thinking are:
Here are other possible relationship or fields common interest between Lean Thinking and Austrian Economics: * Value Theories - Value as defined by customer * Lean enterprise and spontaneous organisation around a value stream. * The lean enterprise and the theory of the firm. * Lean Approaches versus bureaucratic approaches * Lean and business cycles.
I am more then willing to investigage this further and provide more information on the matter and would like to hear more comments on this. Of course I would like to write articles on this and publish them on my web site on lean manufacturing citing information I got here , too
John Podlasek: I guess you would have to tell what exactly is fat manufacturing. I have am not up to date with that.
I guess you would have to tell what exactly is fat manufacturing. I have am not up to date with that.
To me lean is business, so it applies to mass production as well. You must improve, you must keep your customer happy or you will go out of business. TPS (Toyota production system) is a mass production system, and does not apply to other companies. In my companie we make over 500 different products. We do not make a product per say. We have machines and produce whatever fits our business model. We will never have one piece flow,or a direct pull system, and we have to keep inventory, but I argue that our company is very lean in regards to our industry.
I would attribute our business as a product of Keynesian economics,, but that is the world we live in, and what needs to be understood.
John
John Podlasek:To me lean is business, so it applies to mass production as well.
Here is a comparison between craft, mass production, lean manufacturing:
Feature
Craft
Mass production
Lean Manufacturing
Focus
Set of Tasks
A specific product
Value for Customer
Operational style
Single, unique items, done by craftsmen
Batch and queue pushed through production line
Synchronized flow activated by a pull
Overall aim
Master the craft
Reduce cost per item
Quality
Workmanship
Inspection
Prevention, design, process control
Business Strategy
Customisation uniqueness of product
Economics of scale, standardization
Flexibility, quick response to customer
Improvement
Master driven experiential improvement
Expert Driven improvement projects
Team Driven continuous improvement
Management style
Seniority
Scientific management
Delegation to work force
Also see Table 4.1. on p97 in Lean Enterprise Value Insights from MIT’s Lean Aerospace Initiative by Murman et al.
Of course it’s not always possible to apply all the aspects of Lean.
Sorry for the late comment (I happened across this while looking for something else)....
I knew a good deal about Austrian economics when I first heard of lean, and lean immediately brought Austrian economics to mind: