Explaining Technical Change in a Small Country [electronic resource] : The Finnish National Innovation System /

Technical change is produced by the interaction of a large number of technical, economic, social and institutional factors. One of the starting points is the concept of national innovation systems. The aim of this book is to take Finland as an example illustrating the challenges faced by small countries. The characteristics and performance of the Finnish national innovation system of the last couple of decades are analyzed. The Finnish experience is put in a broader context by comparing it with a few other countries. The development paths possible in the near future are assessed. According to the results, many problems remain despite favourable developments in several technology indicators. The rigidities of the social institutions created during the 1970s and 1980s seem to have become obstacles for economic and technological development. There are fairly large differences between the countries studied, and even between the culturally and historically close Nordic countries. However,Finland and Sweden seem to share the same kind of encompassing collective risk-sharing systems, which may have detrimental effects on, for instance, incentives related to innovativeness. Increasing globalisation requires further development of the national system of innovation. Technology policy must be seen as one part of more encompassing social and economic policies, and the role of factors such as well-functioning institutions, appropriate education and sound incentive systems is highly important. The papers of this book are written by experts of various research disciplines. They reflect the respective views on the issue how technical change in Finland can be explained. It is also discussed how Finland fares in comparison to Denmark, Sweden, Japan and the United States.

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Main Authors: Vuori, Synnöve. editor., Vuorinen, Pentti. editor., SpringerLink (Online service)
Format: Texto biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Heidelberg : Physica-Verlag HD : Imprint: Physica, 1994
Subjects:Physics., Business., Management science., Science, International economics., Economic policy., Societal Aspects of Physics., Business and Management, general., International Economics., R & D/Technology Policy.,
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-95913-4
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collection Koha
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countrycode MX
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode cat-colpos
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Departamento de documentación y biblioteca de COLPOS
language eng
topic Physics.
Business.
Management science.
Science
International economics.
Economic policy.
Physics.
Societal Aspects of Physics.
Business and Management, general.
International Economics.
R & D/Technology Policy.
Physics.
Business.
Management science.
Science
International economics.
Economic policy.
Physics.
Societal Aspects of Physics.
Business and Management, general.
International Economics.
R & D/Technology Policy.
spellingShingle Physics.
Business.
Management science.
Science
International economics.
Economic policy.
Physics.
Societal Aspects of Physics.
Business and Management, general.
International Economics.
R & D/Technology Policy.
Physics.
Business.
Management science.
Science
International economics.
Economic policy.
Physics.
Societal Aspects of Physics.
Business and Management, general.
International Economics.
R & D/Technology Policy.
Vuori, Synnöve. editor.
Vuorinen, Pentti. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
Explaining Technical Change in a Small Country [electronic resource] : The Finnish National Innovation System /
description Technical change is produced by the interaction of a large number of technical, economic, social and institutional factors. One of the starting points is the concept of national innovation systems. The aim of this book is to take Finland as an example illustrating the challenges faced by small countries. The characteristics and performance of the Finnish national innovation system of the last couple of decades are analyzed. The Finnish experience is put in a broader context by comparing it with a few other countries. The development paths possible in the near future are assessed. According to the results, many problems remain despite favourable developments in several technology indicators. The rigidities of the social institutions created during the 1970s and 1980s seem to have become obstacles for economic and technological development. There are fairly large differences between the countries studied, and even between the culturally and historically close Nordic countries. However,Finland and Sweden seem to share the same kind of encompassing collective risk-sharing systems, which may have detrimental effects on, for instance, incentives related to innovativeness. Increasing globalisation requires further development of the national system of innovation. Technology policy must be seen as one part of more encompassing social and economic policies, and the role of factors such as well-functioning institutions, appropriate education and sound incentive systems is highly important. The papers of this book are written by experts of various research disciplines. They reflect the respective views on the issue how technical change in Finland can be explained. It is also discussed how Finland fares in comparison to Denmark, Sweden, Japan and the United States.
format Texto
topic_facet Physics.
Business.
Management science.
Science
International economics.
Economic policy.
Physics.
Societal Aspects of Physics.
Business and Management, general.
International Economics.
R & D/Technology Policy.
author Vuori, Synnöve. editor.
Vuorinen, Pentti. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_facet Vuori, Synnöve. editor.
Vuorinen, Pentti. editor.
SpringerLink (Online service)
author_sort Vuori, Synnöve. editor.
title Explaining Technical Change in a Small Country [electronic resource] : The Finnish National Innovation System /
title_short Explaining Technical Change in a Small Country [electronic resource] : The Finnish National Innovation System /
title_full Explaining Technical Change in a Small Country [electronic resource] : The Finnish National Innovation System /
title_fullStr Explaining Technical Change in a Small Country [electronic resource] : The Finnish National Innovation System /
title_full_unstemmed Explaining Technical Change in a Small Country [electronic resource] : The Finnish National Innovation System /
title_sort explaining technical change in a small country [electronic resource] : the finnish national innovation system /
publisher Heidelberg : Physica-Verlag HD : Imprint: Physica,
publishDate 1994
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-95913-4
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spelling KOHA-OAI-TEST:2303552018-07-31T00:13:11ZExplaining Technical Change in a Small Country [electronic resource] : The Finnish National Innovation System / Vuori, Synnöve. editor. Vuorinen, Pentti. editor. SpringerLink (Online service) textHeidelberg : Physica-Verlag HD : Imprint: Physica,1994.engTechnical change is produced by the interaction of a large number of technical, economic, social and institutional factors. One of the starting points is the concept of national innovation systems. The aim of this book is to take Finland as an example illustrating the challenges faced by small countries. The characteristics and performance of the Finnish national innovation system of the last couple of decades are analyzed. The Finnish experience is put in a broader context by comparing it with a few other countries. The development paths possible in the near future are assessed. According to the results, many problems remain despite favourable developments in several technology indicators. The rigidities of the social institutions created during the 1970s and 1980s seem to have become obstacles for economic and technological development. There are fairly large differences between the countries studied, and even between the culturally and historically close Nordic countries. However,Finland and Sweden seem to share the same kind of encompassing collective risk-sharing systems, which may have detrimental effects on, for instance, incentives related to innovativeness. Increasing globalisation requires further development of the national system of innovation. Technology policy must be seen as one part of more encompassing social and economic policies, and the role of factors such as well-functioning institutions, appropriate education and sound incentive systems is highly important. The papers of this book are written by experts of various research disciplines. They reflect the respective views on the issue how technical change in Finland can be explained. It is also discussed how Finland fares in comparison to Denmark, Sweden, Japan and the United States.1 Outlines of the Finnish Innovation System: The Institutional Setup and Performance -- 2 Pecularities of Social and Technological Change in the Finnish Society -- 3 The Social Infrastructure of Innovation in Finland -- 4 Growth and Technical Change in Finland: The Role of Collective Sharing of Economic Risks -- 5 The Role of Firms in Technological Change — A Company View -- 6 Comparing National Systems of Innovation. The Case of Finland, Denmark and Sweden -- 7 Technological Systems and Economic Growth: Comparing Finland, Sweden, Japan, and the United States -- 8 Characteristics of Technology Policy in Finland -- 9 Comment on Tarmo Lemola’s Article -- 10 The Rigidities and Potential of a National Innovation System.Technical change is produced by the interaction of a large number of technical, economic, social and institutional factors. One of the starting points is the concept of national innovation systems. The aim of this book is to take Finland as an example illustrating the challenges faced by small countries. The characteristics and performance of the Finnish national innovation system of the last couple of decades are analyzed. The Finnish experience is put in a broader context by comparing it with a few other countries. The development paths possible in the near future are assessed. According to the results, many problems remain despite favourable developments in several technology indicators. The rigidities of the social institutions created during the 1970s and 1980s seem to have become obstacles for economic and technological development. There are fairly large differences between the countries studied, and even between the culturally and historically close Nordic countries. However,Finland and Sweden seem to share the same kind of encompassing collective risk-sharing systems, which may have detrimental effects on, for instance, incentives related to innovativeness. Increasing globalisation requires further development of the national system of innovation. Technology policy must be seen as one part of more encompassing social and economic policies, and the role of factors such as well-functioning institutions, appropriate education and sound incentive systems is highly important. The papers of this book are written by experts of various research disciplines. They reflect the respective views on the issue how technical change in Finland can be explained. It is also discussed how Finland fares in comparison to Denmark, Sweden, Japan and the United States.Physics.Business.Management science.ScienceInternational economics.Economic policy.Physics.Societal Aspects of Physics.Business and Management, general.International Economics.R & D/Technology Policy.Springer eBookshttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-95913-4URN:ISBN:9783642959134