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Technological infrastructure and international competitiveness

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 23:46 authored by Christopher Freeman
The paper is probably the first written paper using the concept of ‘the national innovation system’ and it analyses how technological infrastructure differs between countries and how such differences are reflected in international competitiveness. It makes a critical review of new (in the 1980s) developments in the theory of international trade and confronts them with recent empirical results. It shows how competitiveness cannot be explained by wage rates/prices/currency rates. Technological leadership gives absolute rather than comparative advantage and technological leadership will reflect institutions supporting coupling, creating, clustering comprehending and coping in connection with technology. The analysis is rooted in historical context through references to Friedrich List and his criticism of Adam Smith and laissez-faire. Special emphasis is put on List's concept of mental capital. Finally, the analytical arguments are illustrated by the catching-up and forging ahead of first Germany and later Japan. The paper concludes that disequilibria in international trade will be persistent and that for laggard economy the free trade doctrine may be unduly restrictive. Another conclusion is that public investment in technological infrastructure and intellectual capital is crucial for successful economic development. It is pointed out that there is a need to couple education, science, trade and industry policy in order to build competitiveness.

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

Industrial and Corporate Change

ISSN

0960-6491

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Issue

3

Volume

13

Page range

541-569

Pages

29.0

Department affiliated with

  • SPRU - Science Policy Research Unit Publications

Notes

This is a reprise of the study that inaugurated modern conceptualisations of the `national innovation system¿, a view that has had a dramatic impact on government thinking of almost all countries together with supranational bodies and their policies in the world today.

Full text available

  • No

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2012-02-06

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