The competitive, dynamic and changing environment in which companies operate today, pose new challenges that allow them to grow and maintain themselves over time, aspects such as customer ...satisfaction, innovation, and social responsibility are increasingly used objectives by the companies. However, elements such as quality and productivity continue to be critical factors in business sustainability. For this, companies must use methodologies and tools to diagnose their processes, identify their critical points and invest in strategies that optimize the operations of their value chain, the use of their resources, and the quality of their products, in order to overcome always the expectations of the clients and achieve differentiation in the market.
The goal of this work is to diagnosis of the situation of the production process in the value chain of the processing and marketing of fish and Shellfish Company as a case study. Also aims to, the identification of waste or MUDA, that affect the quality and productivity of the products. Improvement proposals under Lean Manufacturing tools, for increase the performance in the value chain under study were made. As main results, we can highlight improvement proposals through the lean tools, which promote advances in the organization of the plant and process times.
Editorial Introduction Rodrigues, Paulo Cesar Chagas
Independent Journal of Management & Production,
06/2022, Volume:
13, Issue:
4
Journal Article
Open access
...that they have contributed to the Journal in recognition of the international scientific community. Berlizov, Yakov A. Bolotov, Alevtina E. Novikova DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1910 ...Compliance with corporate governance principles as element of Russian economy investment attractiveness (s402-s414) Victoria V. Prokhorova, Elena I. Artemova, Tatyana G. Gurnovich, Sergey I. Berlin, Elena V. Chekmeneva DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1919 Experimental research of a shared memory subsystem with limited queue length for specialized reconfigurable multiprocessor systems (s415-s424) Alexey I. Martyshkin, Dmitry S. Martens-Atyushev DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1922 University brand: factors, tools and main tendencies of development information about authors (s425-s432) Margarita A. Bulgakova, Anna A. Vertinova, Natalya R. Pashuk DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1915 Depreciation deduction mechanism being in use in the fishing industry and intended for sustainable development of the region (s433-s441) Marina E. Vasilenko DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1917 Implementation of state transport policy: regional aspect (s442-s451) Yana A. Volynchuk, Elvira V. Koroleva, Nina G. Sheremetieva DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1918 Monetary policy and banking intermediation in CBDC economy (s452-s461) Mikhail Vitalyevich Leonov DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1928 IFRS 15 application for accounting of revenue from construction contracts (s462-s472) Tatyana. V. Kim DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1920 Motivation for vocational training among fishing industry workers (s473-s484) Marina G. Masilova DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1913 Review consensus effects on e-wom and consumer goods e-purchase satisfaction: evidence from Vietnam (s485-s502) Cuong Hung PHAM DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1924 GIS technology role and place in Russian economy digitalization (s503-s513) Natalia I. Lyakhova DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1916 Roles of customer care in consumer goods retail marketing: evidence from Vietnam (s514-s525) Cuong Hung PHAM DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1923 Conditions and factors for energy supply company business process organization concerning payment acceptance (s526-s535) Lyubov V. Salova DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1921 Formation of the environment of confidence in sharing economy: problems of civil regulation in Russia (s536-s559) Aiusheeva Irina Zoriktuevna, Soyfer Tatiana Vladimirovna DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1973 Emotional approach to fitness club brand design (s560-s568) Oksana Belokovalenko, Boris Tkhorikov DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1978 Modelling and simulation of charge transport phenomena in graphene on SiO2 / Si substrate and graphene on complex oxide substrates (s569-s583) Aditi Kalsh, V.K. Lamba DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.1995 Fight for vaccine diplomacy in the global world of ipr and trademarks (s584-s601) Minh Le DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.2000 Management of agricultural business in war conditions: features of accounting and taxation (s602-s624) Yana Ishchenko, Nataliia Semenyshena, Nataliia Yevdokymova, Olha Stepaniuk, Vasyl Tsaruk DOI: dx.doi.org/10.14807/ijmp.v13i4.2006 June 1, 2022 Prof. Dr. Paulo Cesar Chagas Rodrigues Editor in Chief 1 Google Analytics (2022).
Indonesia dengan marine biodiversity salah satu yang tertinggi di dunia, memiliki potensi perikanan yang besar. Penelitian ini merupakan penelitian kuantitatif dengan tujuan untuk mengetahui ...faktor-faktor yang mempengaruhi pertumbuhan industri perikanan di Indonesia. Pertumbuhan industri diukur melalui parameter hasil perikanan budidaya dan hasil perikanan tangkap. Untuk menemukan faktor penyebabnya dilakukan uji korelasi terhadap beberapa variabel yang mewakili faktor internal (jumlah armada dan jumlah rumah tangga perikanan budidaya), lingkungan (luas area perikanan budidaya), indikator ekonomi (indeks harga konsumen dan inflasi), kebijakan pemerintah (indeks pembangunan manusia), kependudukan (kepadatan penduduk), serta hukum (resiko penduduk terkena tindak pidana). Pengujian dilakukan menggunakan analisis korelasi terhadap data tahun 2014-2016 pada 34 provinsi. Hasilnya faktor internal dan lingkungan berpengaruh positif signifikan terhadap industri perikanan. Sebaliknya, faktor ekonomi tidak berpengaruh signifikan. Sementara itu, secara parsial IPM berpengaruh negatif signifikan terhadap hasil perikanan tangkap sedangkan kepadatan penduduk dan resiko penduduk terkena tindak pidana berpengaruh negatif signifikan terhadap hasil perikanan budidaya.
This paper characterizes the heterogeneity of business chambers in the Argentine fishing industry. This activity is important not only because of the foreign currency it generates, but also because ...of the labor market associated with it. However, at present, little information is available on the business sector of this important economic activity. Moreover, current social science research on the Argentine fishing industry mainly deals with the role of employees, their trade associations, unions and labor conflicts. Methodologically, we worked with secondary sources and interviews with representatives of the business chambers to characterize the sector and to know how they are grouped and organized. In this way, the history and genesis of the different economic agents of the fishing activity at present is approached.
While land-based sources of marine plastic pollution have gained widespread attention, marine-based sources are less extensively investigated. Here, we provide the first in-depth description of ...abandoned, lost or otherwise discarded fishing gear (ALDFG) on northern and southern beaches of the English Southwest Peninsula, Great Britain's region of highest ALDFG density. Three distinct categories were recorded: twisted rope (0.28 ± 0.14 m−1, 17%), braided rope (0.56 ± 0.28 m−1, 33%) and filament (0.84 ± 0.41 m−1, 50%), which likely correspond to fishing rope, net and line. Estimating the disintegration of ALDFG from length and filament number suggests that it has the potential to generate 1277 ± 431 microplastic pieces m−1, with fishing rope (44%) and net (49%) as the largest emitters. Importantly, ALDFG was over five times more abundant on the south coast, which is likely attributable to the three times higher fishing intensity in that area.
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•Beached fishing litter abundance is linked to fishing effort (total catch).•Fishing ropes, nets and lines are the main contributors to beached fishing litter.•Beached fishing litter may release hundreds of microplastic pieces per metre.•Microplastic release could potentially be traced to specific fishing activities.
Critically examines the role of humanitarian aid and disaster reconstructionBuilding Back Better in India: Development, NGOs, and Artisanal Fishers after the 2004 Tsunami addresses the ways in which ...natural disasters impact the strategies and priorities of neoliberalizing states in the contemporary era. In the light of growing scholarly and public concern over "disaster capitalism" and the tendency of states and powerful international financial institutions to view disasters as "opportunities" to "build back better," Raja Swamy offers an ethnographically rich account of post-disaster reconstruction, its contested aims, and the mixed outcomes of state policy, humanitarian aid, and local resistance. Using the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami as a case study, Swamy investigates the planning and implementation of a reconstruction process that sought to radically transform the geography of a coastal district in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu. Drawing on an ethnographic study conducted in Tamil Nadu's Nagapattinam District, Swamy shows how and why the state-led, multilaterally financed, and NGO-mediated reconstruction prioritized the displacement of coastal fisher populations. Exploring the substantive differences shaping NGO action, specifically in response to core political questions affecting the well-being of their ostensible beneficiaries, this account also centers the political agency of disaster survivors and their allies among NGOs in contesting the meanings of recovery while navigating the process of reconstruction. If humanitarian aid brought together NGOs and fishers as givers and recipients of aid, it also revealed in its workings competing and sometimes contradictory assumptions, goals, interests, and strategies driving the fraught historical relationship between artisanal fishers and the state. Importantly, this research foregrounds the ambiguous role of NGOs involved in the distribution of aid, as well as the agency and strategic actions of the primary recipients of aid-the fishers of Nagapattinam-as they struggled with a reconstruction process that made receipt of the humanitarian gift of housing conditional on the formal abandonment of all claims to the coast. Building Back Better in India thus bridges scholarly concerns with disasters, humanitarianism, and economic development with those focused on power, agency, and resistance.
Keystone species have a disproportionate influence on the structure and function of ecosystems. Here we analyze whether a keystone-like pattern can be observed in the relationship between ...transnational corporations and marine ecosystems globally. We show how thirteen corporations control 11-16% of the global marine catch (9-13 million tons) and 19-40% of the largest and most valuable stocks, including species that play important roles in their respective ecosystem. They dominate all segments of seafood production, operate through an extensive global network of subsidiaries and are profoundly involved in fisheries and aquaculture decision-making. Based on our findings, we define these companies as keystone actors of the Anthropocene. The phenomenon of keystone actors represents an increasingly important feature of the human-dominated world. Sustainable leadership by keystone actors could result in cascading effects throughout the entire seafood industry and enable a critical transition towards improved management of marine living resources and ecosystems.
•Three-quarters of consumers (77%) are willing to pay more for Anisakis-free fish products in Spain.•Results indicated a modal willingness-to-pay (WTP) of 10% extra for the product.•Many consumers ...have avoided and would avoid fish consumption due to Anisakis.•WTP was significantly related to gender, stated avoidance behaviour and risk perception.•Overall, consumers identified Anisakis as an important health and aesthetic issue.
The presence of parasitic nematodes of the genus Anisakis and/or their proteins in seafood poses a risk to human health through a fish-borne zoonosis, namely anisakiasis, that can cause gastrointestinal disease and allergy. The presence of Anisakis may also dissuade consumers from purchasing fishery products, resulting in economic losses to the fishing industry. This is the first time a survey-based contingent valuation study has been performed to investigate consumers’ willingness to pay for Anisakis-free fish, and to analyse consumers’ responses to the presence of Anisakis in fishery products. In a survey conducted in Spain, the majority of consumers (77%) were willing to pay extra for an Anisakis-free product, indicating a willingness to pay 10% above the usual fish price at market (6.60€/kg compared with 6€/kg). Past reluctance to purchase or consume fish due to the presence of Anisakis was reported by >25% of consumers, with hake being the most frequently rejected species. Nearly two thirds of consumers would cease consuming or purchasing fish due to the presence of Anisakis. Consumers’ willingness to pay was found to be significantly related to gender, stated past and future avoidance of fish consumption or purchase due to the presence of Anisakis, stated past avoidance of cod, hake and mackerel, stated consumption of sardines, and to their perception of the degree of risk of future development of anisakiasis and/or allergy to Anisakis. The study revealed two main types of reaction to the presence of Anisakis in fish: the avoidance of eating parasitized fish, and a willingness to pay above market price to avoid adverse effects on health and food quality. Overall, the results suggest that the presence of Anisakis in fish is an important health and aesthetic issue for consumers, and this is relevant for the fishing and food industries as well as for food safety authorities. Improvements in parasite inspections and development of technologies to prevent Anisakis infection in fishery products would likely both improve the economic sustainability of the industry and benefit public health.