Technology and Economic Development |
Contents
Technical Change in the Third World | 3 |
Changing Paradigms | 59 |
Opportunity | 65 |
Copyright | |
6 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Accordingly activities analysis Brazil Buenos Aires capital goods sector choice of technique comparative advantage competition conceptual conceptualisation conclusion Corden cost-benefit analysis Dahlman dependency theory discussion domestic economic growth economists effects emerged empirical examination example Exports of Technology firms foreign technology free trade Furthermore import substitution imported technology improvements incentives incremental industrialised countries industrialised Third World infant industries influence innovations inputs intervention investment involved Japan Japanese Kaplinsky Katz labour Lall learning-by-doing less developed countries literature machine machinery manufacturing necessary Nelson neo-Schumpeterian neoclassical economics noted organisational output paradigm problem process of economic process of technical protection question reason relatively result role Rosenberg 1982 Science and Technology shadow prices social South Korea Stewart studies suggested survey Taiwan technical change technological capabilities technological change technological dependence technological knowledge technology exports Third World countries total factor productivity uncertainty University Press Westphal World Bank X-Efficiency