>
China's Path to Innovation

China's Path to Innovation

  • £30.59
  • Save £58


Xiaolan Fu
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 2/5/2015
EAN 9781107046993, ISBN10: 1107046998

Hardcover, 454 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.5 cm
Language: English

Over the past three decades, China has experienced rapid economic growth and a fascinating transformation of its industry. However, much of this success is the result of industrial imitation, and China's continuing success now relies heavily on its ability to strengthen its indigenous innovation capability. In this book, Xiaolan Fu investigates how China can develop a strategy of compressed development to emerge as a leading innovative nation. The book draws on quantitative and qualitative research that includes cross-country, cross-province and cross-firm analysis. Large multi-level panel datasets, unique survey databases, and in-depth industry case studies are explored. Different theoretical approaches are also used to examine the motivations, obstacles and consequences of China's innovation with a wider discussion around what other countries can learn from China's experience. This book will appeal to scholars and policy-makers working in fields such as innovation policy, technology management, development and international economics, and China studies.

Preface
List of abbreviations
1. Introduction
2. Innovation in China since the reforms
an overview
Part I. International Knowledge Transfer and Technological Take-off
3. Foreign direct investment, absorptive capacity and innovation in Chinese regions
4. Processing trade, FDI and international competitiveness of the Chinese high-technology industries
5. Indigenous and foreign innovation efforts and technological upgrading in China
Part II. Development of Indigenous Innovation Capacity and Catch-up
6. The role of state policy in shaping innovation practices
the case of open innovation in China
7. Open innovation as a response to constraints and resources
8. The dual role of universities in industrial innovation
comparing China and the UK
9. Technological learning, tacit knowledge acquisition and industrial upgrading
the Chinese optical fibre and cable industry
10. Leapfrogging in green technology
the solar-PV industry in China and India
Part III. Towards a Global Innovation Leader
11. Internationalisation, reverse learning and capabilities upgrading
the case of Huawei and ZTE
12. International collaboration and radical innovation
13. Innovation efficiency and the cross-country gaps in innovation
14. Incentives, institutions and national innovation performances
15. Conclusions
open national innovation system and China's path to innovation
References
Index.