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Writer °ü¸®ÀÚ Date 2023-08-16
Subject [2024] Innovation-Development Detours for Latecomers: Managing Global-Local Inte
rfaces in the De-Globalization Era, Cambridge Univ. Press.
Contents Keun Lee, (2024, open access) Innovation-Development Detours for Latecomers: Managing Global-Local Interfaces in the De-Globalization Era, Cambridge University Press.
( ISBNs: HB: 9781009456258; PB: 9781009456265)
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Abstract

This book proposes an alternative to prevailing ideas on economic development. First, multiple pathways for economic catching-up by latecomers are possible, and latecomers do not necessarily follow the trajectories of the incumbent advanced economies in a linear manner in their effort to overcome the entry barrier and other challenges at the middle-income stage. Second, most of the successful catching up experiences have included strategically maneuvering the global-local interface, thereby promoting emergence of locally-owned big businesses and going through a period of increasing concentration, rather than decentralization. Third, the creation of growth poles, whether they may be firms, sectors, or regions, have been possible out of the effective interaction of diverse dimensions of innovation systems, which include the active policy intervention by national or sub-national governments. In sum, in place of priority on free markets as in the Washington Consensus, this book argues that no successful catch up has ever occurred without active or planned intervention by public policies, which are needed to overcome the latecomers¡¯ disadvantages of the entry barrier at the middle-income stage. Instead of traditional priority on manufacturing, this book proposes the priority of local ownership and knowledge.

Table of Contents

Ch. 1. Introduction
1.1 De-Globalization and the Need for New Thinking
1.2 Innovation-Development Detours
1.3 Further Elaboration of Key Themes
1.4 Innovation–Development Detour in South Korea
1.5 Roles of the Government along the Detours
1.6. Key Messages and Contribution of the book

Ch. 2. National Innovation Systems (NIS) and Pathways for Latecomers
2.1 Introduction
2.2. Catching up, Forging ahead, and Falling behind of Nations
2.3. Varieties of National Innovation Systems and Their Linkages to
Economic Growth
2.4. Contrasting Pathways of the Two Imbalanced NIS: Catching up vs. Trapped
2.5. The Balanced System and the Indian Pathway
2.6. A Pathway Out of the Trap: Resource-Based Development in
Chile and Malaysia
2.7. Concluding Remarks

Ch. 3. From Global-Local Interface to Local Value-added,
Knowledge, and Ownership
3.1 Introduction: Liberalization Trap
3.2. The Global-Local Interface and Industrial Policy in Chile and
Malaysia
3.3. The Global-Local Interface and Industrial Policy in Auto Sectors in Asia
3.4. The Global-Local Interface in Innovation Systems of Taipei,
Penang and Shenzhen
3.5 Concluding Remarks

Ch. 4. Coevolution of Firms with Sectoral, Regional, and National
Systems
4.1 Introduction
4.2. Catching Up with Different and Similar Technologies
4.3. Firms Co-Evolving with Surrounding Institutions
4.4. A Core Firm Leading the Detour Path of Growth: TSMC in
Hsinchu
4.5. Micro Foundation for Macro-Level Convergence
4.6 Concluding Remarks

Ch. 5. Korea¡¯s Innovation-Development Detour
5.1 Introduction: Why Korea?
5.2 Very Brief History of Korea
5.3 Myths of the Korean Miracle
5.4 Korea¡¯s First Detour: Big Businesses First, SMEs Later
5.5 Korea¡¯s Second Detour: Short- to Long-Cycle Specialization
5.6 The Korean Model as a Detour to Manage the Global-Local
Interface
5.7 Concluding Remarks

Ch. 6. Roles of the Government along the Detours
6.1. Introduction
6.2. Detour in the Role of the Government
6.3. Role of the Government in the Global–local Interface
6.4. Role of the Government in the Detour from Big Businesses to
SMEs
6.5. The Role of the Government in the Detour from Short to Long
cycle technologies
6.6. Summary and Concluding Remarks

Ch. 7. Summary and Conclusions
7.1 Summary
7.2 Contributions and Limitations.

Summaries by chapters in the attached file, together with the files of chs, 1 and 7. .
(Individual academic users are free to down the pdf from the publisher site: book is open access, too)
Upload #1 contents chapter summaries and chs 1 and 8.pdf (907,068 byte)