1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910751387203321

Autore

da Motta e Albuquerque Eduardo

Titolo

Technological revolutions and the periphery : understanding global development through regional lenses / / Eduardo da Motta e Albuquerque

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Cham : , : Springer International Publishing AG, , 2023

©2023

ISBN

9783031434365

9783031434358

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (227 pages)

Collana

Contributions to Economics Series

Soggetti

Economic development - Effect of technological innovations on

Economic development - History

Regional economic disparities - History

Technological innovations - Social aspects - History

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction: The Peculiarities of the Propagation of Technological Revolutions Through the Periphery -- References -- Part I: Theoretical Framework -- Chapter 2: The Roots of System Expansion and the Role of Absorptive Capacity -- 2.1 The Roots of System Expansion -- 2.2 Three Dimensions for a Theoretical Framework -- 2.2.1 Kondratiev: Technological Change and Inclusion of New Regions -- 2.2.2 Furtado: Technology Progress at the Periphery -- 2.2.3 Cohen and Levinthal: Absorptive Capacity -- 2.3 A Tentative Theoretical Framework: A Combined Dynamics of Expansion and Assimilation -- Appendix: Notes on Absorptive Capacity and National Innovation Systems -- A.1. Cohen and Levinthal´s Original Elaboration -- A.2 An Exploratory Adaptation for Flows Between Countries -- References -- Part II: Technological Revolutions and Their Impacts on the Periphery -- Chapter 3: The Initial Impacts of the Industrial Revolution: An ``Astonishing Reversal´´ - 1771-1850 -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 An Impact Mediated by Cotton Production: Slavery -- 3.3 An ``Astonishing



Reversal´´ -- 3.3.1 Textile Production Before 1771 -- 3.3.2 Indian Textiles, Markets in Europe and Technology Transfer from the East -- 3.3.3 Consequences of Mechanization of Textiles on Previous Producing Regions -- 3.4 The Puzzle of the Spread of Cotton Industrialization -- 3.4.1 Political Organization of Peripheric Regions -- 3.4.2 A Specialized Sector for Textile Machine Making -- 3.5 Cotton Industrialization Through Machinery Imports -- 3.5.1 India: Different Interactions with Handcraft Production -- 3.5.2 China: Coastal Initial Nuclei of Capitalist Development -- 3.5.3 Russia: Active Policies but Serfdom as a Limiting Factor -- 3.5.4 Sub-Saharan Africa: Very Late Arrival and the Survival of Artisanal Production.

3.5.5 Latin America: Initial Industrialization Induced by Exports -- 3.6 Conclusion: A Technological Revolution That Reshaped the International Division of Labor -- References -- Chapter 4: Railways and the Consolidation of an International Division of Labor: Hinterlands Join the Global Economy - 1829-19... -- 4.1 Introducion -- 4.2 Railways and Their Invention and Initial Expansion in the United Kingdom -- 4.3 Expansionary Forces Emanating from the United Kingdom -- 4.4 Railways in the United States -- 4.4.1 Technology Transfer and Sources of Learning -- 4.4.2 Chandler and the Revolution in Transport and Communication in Nineteenth Century -- 4.4.3 Emerging Global Leadership, Linkages and Lack of Dissipation Effects -- 4.5 View from the Periphery: Different Levels of Political Organization and Their Impact on Railway Building -- 4.5.1 India: Railways as a Colonial Project -- 4.5.2 China: Very Late Beginning and a Post-1949 Priority -- 4.5.3 Russia: Railways and Spurts of Industrialization -- 4.5.4 Sub-Saharan Africa: Colonial Projects and Access to Natural Resources -- 4.5.5 Latin America: Railways, Exports and Beginnings of Industrialization -- 4.6 The Second Big Bang and the Consolidation of the Previous International Division of Labor -- References -- Chapter 5: Electrifying an Existing International Division of Labor: The Emergence of Multinational Firms in a Science-Based T... -- 5.1 Introducion -- 5.2 Electricity, Its Commercial Use and Peculiarities -- 5.3 Expansionary Forces Emanating from The United States: Multinational Firms and Global Electrification -- 5.4 View from The Periphery: Slow and Uneven Increase in Assimilatory Forces -- 5.4.1 India: Late and Anemic Start, Increase of Local Initiatives -- 5.4.2 China: Early Entry, Slow Diffusion with Interactions of Late Arrival of Machines and Railways.

5.4.3 Russia: Electricity and Planning -- 5.4.4 Sub-Saharan Africa: Colonial Electrification and Interaction with Mining -- 5.4.5 Latin America: Electricity and Beginnings of Industrialization -- 5.5 The Expansion Between 1882 and 1937 -- References -- Chapter 6: Automobiles, Oil, Petrochemicals, and Roads - The Inclusion of New Regions After a New Core Input - 1908-1971 -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 The Fourth Big Bang and the Nature of Its Three Interrelated Technologies (and One Unfolding Field) -- 6.2.1 The Automobile -- 6.2.2 The Automobile´s Fuel: Gasoline and Oil Refining -- 6.2.3 The Automobile´s Way: Roads and Their Networks -- 6.2.4 The Combination Between Those Three Components -- 6.3 Expansionary Forces: Multinational Firms in a Three-Pronged Process -- 6.3.1 The Search for Oil Reserves and Changes in the Production Chain -- 6.3.2 Selling and Making Cars (and Trucks) Abroad -- 6.3.3 Roads and Construction -- 6.3.4 Motives and Impacts of Those Expansionary Forces -- 6.4 Political Changes: Decolonization and Domestic Policies -- 6.5 View from the Periphery: Different Arrivals, More Heterogeneity -- 6.5.1 Saudi Arabia as a Case Study: Desert, Oil Drilling, and Petrochemicals -- 6.5.2 India: Entry Before Independence, Industrial



Policies After -- 6.5.3 China: Changing the Source of Technological Transfer -- 6.5.4 Russia: Negotiated Technological Absorption from the West -- 6.5.5 Sub-Saharan Africa: Late Emergence of Oil-Producing Countries -- 6.5.6 Latin America: New Resource for a Raw Materials Exporting Region -- 6.6 The Spread of Three Interrelated Technologies and Their Uneven Impact -- References -- Chapter 7: The Microprocessor and the World Wide Web - Two Technological Revolutions and a Second Reversal? - 1971, 1991 -- 7.1 Introducion -- 7.2 Before the Microprocessor and After the WWW.

7.3 Expansionary Forces in Four Interrelated Technologies -- 7.4 A Note on Institutional Changes: A Qualitative Change in Absorptive Capacities at the Periphery -- 7.5 Assimilatory Forces: More Resources to Cope with Even Bigger Challenges -- 7.5.1 Taiwan as a Case Study: Semiconductors and Lessons for Development -- 7.5.2 Russia: Parity, Widening the Gap, and Destruction -- 7.5.3 India: Experimenting with Computers, Discovering Software -- 7.5.4 China: Entry, Reducing the Gap, and Limited Catch Up -- 7.5.5 Sub-Saharan Africa: Superposition of Backwardnesses -- 7.5.6 Latin America: Initial Entry, Later Exit, and Searching for Niches in the Global Economy -- 7.6 The Spread of These Four Related Technologies -- References -- Part III: Revisiting the Theoretical Framework -- Chapter 8: The Interplay Between Expansionary and Assimilatory Forces -- 8.1 Introducion -- 8.2 Arrival of Technological Revolutions at the Periphery -- 8.3 The Sensitivity of Assimilatory Forces to Political Institutions -- 8.4 Expansionary Forces Change Over Time -- 8.5 Assimilatory Forces Change Over Time -- 8.6 The Multifaceted Interplay Between Expansionary and Assimilatory Forces -- 8.7 Islands of Technological Absorption -- 8.8 Superposition and Overlapping of Different Technological Revolutions -- 8.8.1 At the Center -- 8.8.2 At the Periphery -- 8.9 Heterogeneity at the Periphery -- 8.10 Further Evidence on Capitalism as a Complex System? -- References -- Chapter 9: Conclusion: An Agenda for Global Reform -- References.

Sommario/riassunto

This book evaluates the uneven propagation of technological revolutions, investigating the roots of this phenomenon in the absorptive capabilities that are built by countries and regions at the periphery. To understand this global process, this book looks to two dimensions: time and geography. Temporally, the book follows the sequence of technological revolutions in the last 250 years. With regard to geography, the book studies five different regions at the periphery China, India, Africa, Russia and Latin America to understand how they differ in the institutional processes that shape their absorptive capabilities. Focusing on each technological revolution and its impact on those five peripheric regions, the chapters illustrate how each region coped with each shock wave emanating from the center. Providing a truly global outlook of a complex system with a dynamic nature, this book will be of interest to researchers and students of development economics, the economics of innovation, evolutionary economics, and the economics of science and technology.