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2001 | Buch

Technology and Markets for Knowledge

Knowledge Creation, Diffusion and Exchange within a Growing Economy

herausgegeben von: Bernard Guilhon

Verlag: Springer US

Buchreihe : Economics of Science, Technology and Innovation

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Über dieses Buch

This book provides a unique set of empirical and theoretical analyses on the conditions, determinants and effects of the exchange and trade of technological knowledge. This work delivered by the research team lead by Bernard Guilhon shows that technological knowledge is more and more traded and exchanged in the market place. When and where contractual interactions are implemented by an institutional set-up which makes_the exchange better reliable for both parties. The new evidence provided by the book moreover makes it possible to appreciate the positive role of major knowledge rent externalities provided by the new quasi-markets for technological knowledge. Trade in technological knowledge leads in fact, as the book shows, to higher levels of division of labor, specialization and efficiency in the production and distribution of new technological knowledge. This dynamics is considered a part of a broader process where the generation of technological knowledge is itself becoming closer to the production of goods so that the division of labour among learning organization plays a growing role. Exchange of technological knowledge takes part because the conditions for appropriability are now far better that currently assumed by a large traditional literature. The analysis carried out through the book builds upon the notion of localized technological knowledge and suggests that the exchange of technological knowledge is not a spontaneous 'atmospheric' process.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Frontmatter

The Theoretical Analysis of the Markets for Knowledge

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. How to Characterize Markets for Knowledge ?
Abstract
Knowledge is at the heart of organizational forms as it lays the fundamental questions of its production, of its transfer and of its utilization (Lundvall, 1999). The answers to these questions depend on the formulated hypothesis as to properties attributed to knowledge.
Bernard Guilhon
Chapter 2. The Emergence of the Quasi-Markets for Knowledge
Abstract
In the first chapter, we wished to put the strength on the specific character of knowledge markets. The term quasi-markets expresses the idea that they are not pure markets by which firms could put at work ‘fully explicit blueprints by purchasing homogeneous inputs on anonymous markets’ (Nelson and Winter, p.119). Rather, firms seek to acquire specific instrumental knowledge resting on a specialized expertise, allowing them to increase the efficiency of their daily operations and of their innovation behavior. These markets are far from being a recent phenomenon: Arora, Fosfuri and Gambardella (1999) make reference to the research of Lamoreaux and Sokoloff acknowledging an active technological knowledge market in the USA at the end of the 19thand 20thcentury. The glass industry, according to these authors, did already experiment at that time a ‘division of innovative labor’ between invention activity and its marketing, on the basis of a specific organizational and geographic differentiation.
Bernard Guilhon
Chapter 3. The Working of Markets for Knowledge
Abstract
The first two chapters’ aim was to define knowledge markets compared to transactions on specialized technological assets and to analyze the factors favoring the appearance of these markets. We must now pose the problem of the running of these markets, i.e. their consolidation. Therefore we would be advised to question ourselves on the devices that favor the market circulation of knowledge in the economic system.
Bernard Guilhon

Sectoral Applications

Frontmatter
Chapter 4. The Market for Knowledge in the Chemical Sector
Abstract
Few industries epitomize the market for knowledge as the chemical industry. Large and small companies, universities, and research laboratories are heterogeneous sources of scientific and technological knowledge. Market and non-market interactions are the means through which knowledge diffuses among them, and enhance the potential complementarities.
Fabrizio Cesaroni, Myriam Mariani
Chapter 5. The Market for Knowledge in Bio-Pharmaceuticals
Abstract
The pharmaceutical industry can be simply defined as a gathering of all pharmaceutical product manufacturers. But in a wider sense, it encompasses large areas including the health care sector, whose objective is the development of `products of chemical or biological origin which are intended or purported to have a medicinal effect on man or animals and which are used especially for detection, prevention or treatment of diseases, injuries or disabilities’ (Roche, 1998).
Daisy Rhuguet, Christophe Silvy
Chapter 6. Innovative Labor and Intellectual Property Market in the Semiconductor Industry
Abstract
Anyone wishing to outline the strategic characteristics of the semiconductor industry must look for the common point between those industries which currently lead worldwide growth. In fact, semiconductors act as intermediary products in a growing number of applications (automotive, telecommunications, computers, consumer electronics) which represent a significant part of the global worldwide exchanges,as shown in table 1.
Rajà Attia, Isabelle Davy, Roland Rizoulières
Chapter 7. Evolution of Markets in the Software Industry
Abstract
This chapter analyses the evolution of the software industry into a market for technology and concentrates particularly on the evolution of segmentation within the software industry. The software industry is a good example of technology markets because it encompasses the two forms that a technology market may take. The first is that of a technology market that comprises outsourced demand, as is the case in its customized segment. The second is the possibility of a technology market that is arms-length and independent of particular consumers, as is the case in its product segment.
Suma S Athreye

Conclusion

Conclusion
Abstract
Knowledge, as a technological input, progressively enters the market sphere. This movement goes along with the general evolution of contemporary economies, which are above all market economies. The analyzed process, on the theoretical level and trough four sectoral studies, can not be considered to have an atypical and transitory dimension.
Bernard Guilhon
Backmatter
Metadaten
Titel
Technology and Markets for Knowledge
herausgegeben von
Bernard Guilhon
Copyright-Jahr
2001
Verlag
Springer US
Electronic ISBN
978-1-4615-1605-7
Print ISBN
978-1-4613-5637-0
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-1605-7