xvi •
Editor’s Introduction
•
Economic Law: No system can disburse more wealth than it pro-
duces. This is simply the economic counterpart
of the physical law of
conservation of matter and energy; one cannot get something from
nothing. It is as inviolable as the laws of thermodynamics.
• No ideology can create prosperity, and no government can leg-
islate it.
•
Speculation in tulip bulbs, mortgage-backed securities, houses,
dot-com stocks, and anything else that does not produce value is
a zero-sum game that eventually ends in disaster for most of the
speculators. A stock is worth exactly what its underlying assets
can produce, and no more.
• A supply chain also is a zero-sum
game in which one stakehold-
er’s gain is another’s loss,
unless the supply chain can create more
wealth for all its participants. Application of the scientific law can
change the supply chain from a zero-sum or win–lose game into
a win–win activity for all its stakeholders.
•
Scientific Law: The supply chain can create more wealth through
the elimination of all wastes from its activities.
The economic law
says quite rightly that one cannot get something from nothing,
but, as stated by Ford and Crowther (1926, p. 124), one can get
something from what was considered nothing. This something is
waste that often hides in plain view, and its
elimination is the focus
of Lean manufacturing.
• Ford (1922, p. 329) wrote that is possible to waste exactly three
things: time, material, and energy. It is useful to expand waste of
time to cover the time of people (e.g., waiting and motion inef-
ficiency) and of assets (cycle time).
This allows a workforce to
concentrate on four very simple key performance indicators to
expose all forms of waste. Ford’s workforce did, and this book
will provide numerous examples.
• Elimination of material and energy waste supports all the
basic requirements of the ISO 14001 and ISO 50001
standards,
respectively.
• There is an adage to the effect that one can have high quality,
low cost, or rapid delivery, but not all three. Ford proved, how-
ever, that these three goals are actually synergistic. High quality
removes the cost of poor quality,
while rapid delivery and, there-
fore, a short cycle time reduces inventory and its carrying cost.
Editor’s Introduction • xvii
•
Behavioral Law: The system must provide a square deal to all its
stakeholders including labor, suppliers,
customers, and investors.
Ford and Crowther (1926, p. 40) state explicitly that every business
transaction must benefit all its participants fairly and equitably. This,
in fact, defines social responsibility.
Ford proved unequivocally that this universal code works in applications
ranging from manufacturing to education and healthcare. The next step
is to recognize that the universal code is (1) synergistic, (2) impartial, and
(3) implacable.
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