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Where innovation creates value

It doesn’t matter where scientific discoveries and breakthrough technologies originate—for national prosperity, the important thing is who commercializes them. The United States is not behind in that race.

Now, perhaps, more than ever, the fear of globalization haunts the United States. Many manufacturing companies that once flourished there fell to overseas competition or relocated much of their work abroad. Then services embarked on the same journey. Just as the manufacturing exodus started with low-wage, unskilled labor, the offshoring of services at first involved data entry, routine software programming and testing, and the operation of phone banks. But today, overseas workers analyze financial statements, test trading strategies, and design computer chips and software architectures for US companies.

It is the offshoring of research and development—of innovation and the future—that arouses the keenest anxiety. The economist Richard Freeman spoke for many Americans when he warned that the United States could become significantly less competitive “as large developing countries like China and India harness their growing scientific and engineering expertise to their enormous, low-wage labor forces.”1 What is the appropriate response? One, from the conservative pundit Pat Buchanan, the TV broadcaster Lou Dobbs, and their like, calls for protectionism. Another, seemingly more progressive, approach would be to spend more money to promote cutting-edge science and technology. Much of the establishment, Democratic and Republican alike, has embraced what the economists Sylvia Ostry and Richard Nelson call techno-nationalism and techno-fetishism, which both claim that US prosperity requires continued domination of these fields.

We’ve heard such fears and prescriptions before. In the 1980s, many people attributed the problems of the US economy to the proliferation of lawyers and managers and to a shortage of engineers and scientists; Germany and Japan were praised as countries with a better occupational ratio. Yet in the 1990s, their economies slackened while the United States prospered—and not because it heeded the warnings. Indeed, math and science education in US high schools didn’t improve much. Enrollment in law schools remained high, and managers accounted for a growing proportion of the workforce. The US share of scientific articles, science and engineering PhDs, and patents continued to decline, the service sector to expand, and manufacturing employment to stagnate.

Of course, the United States can’t count on the same happy ending to every episode of the “losing our lead” serial. The integration of China and India into the global economy is a seminal and unprecedented phenomenon. Could the outcome be different this time? Is the United States on the verge of being pummeled by a technological hurricane? In my view, the answer is no. Worries about the offshoring of R&D and the progress of science in China and India arise from a failure to understand technological innovation and its relation to the global economy. Innovation does play a major role in nurturing prosperity, but we must be careful to formulate policies that sustain rather than undermine it—for instance, by favoring one form of innovation over another.

Three levels of innovation

Innovation involves the development of new products or processes and the know-how that begets them. New products can take the form of high-level building blocks or raw materials (for example, microprocessors or the silicon of which they are made), midlevel intermediate goods (motherboards with components such as microprocessors), and ground-level final products (such as computers). Similarly, the underlying know-how for new products includes high-level general principles, midlevel technologies, and ground-level, context-specific rules of thumb. For microprocessors, this know-how includes the laws of solid-state physics (high level), circuit designs and chip layouts (midlevel), and the tweaking of conditions in semiconductor fabrication plants to maximize yields and quality (ground level).

Technological innovations, especially high-level ones, usually have limited economic or commercial importance unless complemented by lower-level innovations. Breakthroughs in solid-state physics, for example, have value for the semiconductor industry only if accompanied by new microprocessor designs, which themselves may be largely useless without plant-level tweaks that make it possible to produce these components in large quantities. A new microprocessor’s value may be impossible to realize without new motherboards and computers, as well.

New know-how and products also require interconnected, nontechnological innovations on a number of levels. A new diskless (thin-client) computer, for instance, generates revenue for its producer and value for its users only if it is marketed effectively and deployed properly. Marketing and organizational innovations are usually needed; for example, such a computer may force its manufacturer to develop a new sales pitch and materials and its users to reorganize their IT departments.

Arguing about which innovations or innovators make the greatest contribution to economic prosperity, however, isn’t helpful, for they all play necessary and complementary roles. Innovations that sustain prosperity are developed and used in a huge game involving many players working on many levels over many years.

Consider, for instance, the story of the key active component in almost all modern electronics: the transistor. A pair of German physicists obtained the first patents for it in the 1920s and ’30s. In 1947, William Shockley and two colleagues at Bell Labs built the first practical point-contact transistor, which Bell used only in small quantities. In 1950, Shockley developed the radically different bipolar junction transistor and licensed it to companies such as Texas Instruments, which at first implemented it in a limited run of radios that were used as a sales tool. Within two decades, transistors had replaced vacuum tubes in radios and TVs and spawned a whole world of new devices, such as electronic calculators and personal computers.

The German physicists’ discoveries began an extended process of developing know-how at a number of levels. Some steps involved high-level discoveries, such as the transistor effect, which earned Shockley and his colleagues a Nobel Prize. Other steps, such as those needed to obtain high production yields in semiconductor plants, called for lower-level, context-specific knowledge.

A similar complexity characterizes globalization. A variety of cross-border flows can be important to innovators—for instance, the diffusion of scientific principles and technological breakthroughs, the licensing of know-how, the export and import of final products, the procurement of intermediate goods and services (offshoring), equity investments, and the use of immigrant labor. Many kinds of global interactions have become more common, but not in a uniform way: international trade in manufactured goods has soared, but most services remain untraded. Of the many activities in the innovation game, only some are performed well in remote, low-cost locations; many midlevel activities, for example, are best conducted close to potential customers.

Where technomania goes wrong

Techno-nationalists and techno-fetishists oversimplify innovation by equating it with discoveries announced in scientific journals and with patents for cutting-edge technologies developed in university or commercial research labs. Since they rarely distinguish between the different levels and kinds of know-how, they ignore the contributions of the other players—contributions that don’t generate publications or patents.

They oversimplify globalization as well—for example, by assuming that high-level ideas and know-how rarely if ever cross national borders and that only the final products made with it are traded. Actually, ideas and technologies move from country to country quite easily, but much final output, especially in the service sector, does not. The findings of science are available—for the price of learned books and journals—to any country that can use them. Advanced technology, by contrast, does have commercial value because it can be patented, but patent owners generally don’t charge higher fees to foreigners. In the early 1950s, what was then a tiny Japanese company called Sony was among the first licensors of Bell Labs’ transistor patent, for $50,000.

In a world where breakthroughs travel easily, their national origins are fundamentally unimportant. Notwithstanding the celebrated claim of the author and New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman, it doesn’t matter that Google’s search algorithm was developed in California. An Englishman invented the World Wide Web’s protocols in a Swiss lab. A Swede and a Dane started Skype, the leading provider of peer-to-peer Internet telephony, in Estonia. To be sure, the foreign provenance of such advances does not harm the US economy (see sidebar, “Case in point: Innovation in health care”).

 

What is true for breakthroughs from Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark, and Estonia is true as well for those from China, India, and other emerging economies. We should expect—and desire—that as prosperity spreads, more places will contribute to humanity’s stock of scientific and technological knowledge. The nations of the earth are not locked into a winner-take-all race for leadership in these fields: the enhancement of research capabilities in China and India, and thus their share of cutting-edge work, will improve living standards in the United States, which, if anything, should encourage these developments rather than waste valuable resources fighting them.

The willingness and ability of lower-level players to create new know-how and products is at least as important to an economy as the scientific and technological breakthroughs on which they rest. Without radio manufacturers such as Sony, for instance, transistors might have remained mere curiosities in a lab. Maryland has a higher per capita income than Mississippi not because Maryland is or was an extremely significant developer of breakthrough technologies but because of its greater ability to benefit from them. Conversely, the city of Rochester, New York—home to Kodak and Xerox—is reputed to have one of the highest per capita levels of patents of all US cities. It is far from the most economically vibrant among them, however.

More than 40 years ago, the British economists Charles Carter and Bruce Williams warned that “it is easy to impede [economic] growth by excessive research, by having too high a percentage of scientific manpower engaged in adding to the stock of knowledge and too small a percentage engaged in using it. This is the position in Britain today.”2 It is very much to the point that the United States has not only great scientists and research labs but also many players that can exploit high-level breakthroughs regardless of where they originate. An increase in the supply of high-level know-how, no matter what its source, provides more raw material for mid- and ground-level innovations that raise US living standards.

Techno-fetishism and techno-nationalism also ignore the implications of the service sector’s ever-growing share of the US economy. Manufacturing, with just 12 percent of US GDP, accounts for some 42 percent of the country’s R&D and employs a disproportionately large number of its scientists, technicians, and engineers. Services, with about 70 percent of US GDP, accounts for a disproportionately low one. But this doesn’t mean that the service sector shuns innovation. As the economist Dirk Pilat notes, “R&D in services is often different in character from R&D in manufacturing. It is less oriented toward technological developments and more at codevelopment, with hardware and software suppliers, of ways to apply technology” to products.3 Whatever proportion of resources a manufacturing economy should devote to formal research (or research labs) and to educating scientists, the appropriate proportion would be lower in a services-based economy.

Consider a particularly important aspect of the US service sector: its use of innovations in information technology. It simply doesn’t matter where they were developed; the benefits accrue mainly to US workers and consumers because, in contrast to manufacturing, most services generated in the United States are consumed there. Suppose that IT researchers in, say, Germany create an application that helps retailers to cut inventories. Wal-Mart Stores and many of its US competitors have shown conclusively that they are much more likely to use such technologies than retailers in, for example, Germany, where regulations and a preference for picturesque but inefficient small-scale shops discourage companies from taking a chance on anything new. That is among the main reasons why since the mid-1990s, productivity and incomes have grown faster in the United States than in Europe and Japan.

Changing course

Since innovation is not a zero-sum game among nations, and high-level science and engineering are no more important than the ability to use them in mid- and ground-level innovations, the United States should reverse policies that favor the one over the other, and it should cease to worry that the forward march of the rest of the human race will reduce it to ruin.

One obvious example of its mistaken policies is the provision of subsidies and grants for R&D but not for the marketing of products or for the development of ground-level know-how to help the people who use them. Similarly, companies such as Wal-Mart have very large IT budgets and staffs that develop a great deal of ground-level expertise and even develop in-house systems. But none of this qualifies for R&D incentives.

Policies to promote long-term investment by providing tax credits for capital equipment and for brick-and-mortar structures seem outdated as well. The purchase price of enterprise-resource-planning systems, for example, is just a fraction of the total cost of the projects to implement them. Yet businesses eligible for investment-tax credits to buy computer hardware or software don’t receive tax breaks for the cost of training users, adapting hardware and software systems to the specific needs of a company, or reengineering its business processes to accommodate them.

Immigration policies that favor high-level research by preferring highly trained engineers and scientists to people who hold only bachelor’s degrees are misguided too. By working in, say, the IT departments of retailers and banks, immigrants who don’t have advanced degrees probably make as great a contribution to the US economy as those who do. Likewise, the US patent system is excessively attuned to the needs of R&D labs and not enough to those of innovators developing mid- and ground-level products, which often don’t generate patentable intellectual property under current rules and are often threatened by easily obtained high-level patents.

Thomas Friedman to the contrary, the world is hardly flat: China and India aren’t close to catching up with the United States in the ability to develop and use technological innovations. Starting afresh may allow these countries to leapfrog ahead in some respects—building advanced mobile-phone networks, for example. But excelling in the overall innovation game requires a great and diverse team, which takes a very long time to build. Japan, for instance, began to modernize itself in the late 1860s. Within a few decades, it had utterly transformed its industry, educational system, and military. Today, the country’s highly developed economy makes important contributions to technological progress. Yet after nearly 150 years of modernization, Japan remains behind the United States in the overall capacity to develop and use those innovations, as average productivity data show. South Korea and Taiwan, which have enjoyed truly miraculous growth rates since the 1970s, are still further behind. Do China and India have any real likelihood, at any time in the foreseeable future, of attaining the parity with the United States that has so far eluded Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan?

Complacency is dangerous, but fretting over imaginary threats impairs the ability to address real ones. A misguided fear of scientific and technological progress in China and India distracts Americans both from its benefits and from the important problems created by the integration of these two countries into the global economy—such as the soaring per capita fossil fuel consumption of more than two billion people. We do have much to worry about. Let’s worry about the right things.

About the Author

Amar Bhidé is the Lawrence D. Glaubinger Professor of Business at Columbia University. This article summarizes the first and last chapters of his book The Venturesome Economy: How Innovation Sustains Prosperity in a More Connected World (Princeton University Press, 2008).

Notes

1See Ashley Pettus, “Overseas insourcing,” Harvard Magazine, 2005, Volume 108, Number 2.

2Charles F. Carter and Bruce R. Williams, “Government scientific policy and the growth of the British economy,” The Manchester School, 1964, Volume 32, Number 3, pp. 197–214.

3Dirk Pilat, “Innovation and productivity in services: State of the art,” Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2001.

Recommend (33)
  • 1 APRIL 2010
    Srinivasan N
    COO
    ProPart Solutions India P Ltd.
    Hyderabad, India

    ...So outsourcing as it is understood widely will become a thing of the past sooner or later. That will give a new (but the inevitable) definition to global village: a flat world in terms of competitive advantage....

    .
    Srinivasan N
    COO
    ProPart Solutions India P Ltd.
    Hyderabad, India

    The fundamental thesis that this article supports is that there is a need for balance. The author has done well to provide the taxonomy of innovation at three levels. My take on this is that different countries have relatively superior competency in one or the other areas (of innovation or execution), as Porter had stated. One difference is emerging though. Due to the impact of globalisation, we will be seeing that these competitive advantages are going to become increasingly more blurred. The arbitrage in labor cost is already happening. China, Hungary, India and other countries to which jobs had migrated solely for cost advantage are already seeing that compensation levels have shot thru the roof. Whereas the US labor has now started climbing down from the high wage levels to beat the slow down induced job losses. So outsourcing as it is understood widely will become a thing of the past sooner or later. That will give a new (but the inevitable) definition to global village: a flat world in terms of competitive advantage.

    Yet the United States enjoys an advantage that emerging economies like China and India don’t have yet—the spirit of entrepreneurship and the climate for assimilation of innovation. That is something similar to what Jawaharlal Nehru had written about the Indian genius for assimilating aspects of diverse cultures. As long as the US keeps its doors open recognising that, barring the Native Americans, everyone else is essentially an immigrant and so does not feel either possessive or threatened, the multi-racial, multi-cultural society can continue to thrive. While Glasnost did not deliver the results it should have for the erstwhile USSR because the people were not prepared for it, the opening of the Indian economy since 1991 had shown that a free democratic society can indeed adapt itself to the winds of change faster and gain from it. While it is natural and understandable at micro level of the individual to call for protectionist policies (imagine that coming from a country that gave the clarion call for life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness!), the policy makers need to show more vision and statesmanship and pursue what is good in the long run for the US. It is not easy for a nation that emerged the leader of one of the two blocs in the aftermath of the Second World War and went on to be the unchallenged head of an uni-polar world to adjust to facing the heat of competition (that it had vigorously espoused not too long ago!) Yet this inevitable evolution of history must be faced. Instead of fighting the inevitable, if the US calibrates its responses astutely, it can still retain the position of being the first among the equals in the next few years. Will sagacity prevail or jingoism take over?

    .
  • 28 JULY 2009
    Dr. Ananya Guha
    Indira Gandhi National Open University
    Shillong, Meghalaya, India

    ...I do not understand why the ‘ western ‘ world is propagating this artifice: that India and China are marching ahead of the rest of the world in terms of technology and innovation...

    .
    Dr. Ananya Guha
    Indira Gandhi National Open University
    Shillong, Meghalaya, India

    Amar Bhide’s article is superb, cogent, and myth dispelling. I do not understand why the ‘ western ‘ world is propagating this artifice: that India and China are marching ahead of the rest of the world in terms of technology and innovation. And of course Indians are cock a hoop with this much vaunted success. Simply producing hardware and software is not innovation. Use of technology means not only access but effectuality lies in its usage for developmental purposes, prime among which should be education.

    How much technology is being creatively used in India? Notwithstanding the claims of some Open Universities that this is a phenomenal success, the distribution is lop sided. It is not only lack of access—access is increasing—but there are no players behind it, innovative, creative players, who should be the causality behind it. And all this talk of e-governance, etc. The apprehensions of the US as posited clearly by Professor Bhide is fragmentary, unrealistic, and fetishistic, propounded by people such as Hilary Clinton who recently stated that India has one of the best technical education systems in the world! A Majority of the children cannot go to school—ardent educators are fighting for right to education to be converted from a bill to an act, fighting for the common school system, teacher abseentism is still haunting schools, and we talk of technological innovation and the temerity of it alL—compare it to the US!

    .
  • 30 JUNE 2009
    Sagnik Bhattacharjee
    Trainee Financial Analyst
    Global Ids
    Kolkata, India

    ...if the US wants to dominate the field of science and technology it must continue to attract the best talent from around the world along with encouraging more US students to study science and engineering....

    .
    Sagnik Bhattacharjee
    Trainee Financial Analyst
    Global Ids
    Kolkata, India

    It must be realised that if the US wants to dominate the field of science and technology it must continue to attract the best talent from around the world along with encouraging more US students to study science and engineering. It is indeed true that more availability of people with the right skills will help to raise the productivity and sustainability of not only US companies but also companies of different countries.

    .
  • 10 APRIL 2009
    Trevor Miles
    Director, Product marketing
    Kinaxis
    Ottawa, ON, Canada

    Without a doubt this is an interesting topic which has created a lively debate. While there is much in the article with which I agree, I think there are some fundamental flaws, the greatest of which is discussed by David...

    .
    Trevor Miles
    Director, Product marketing
    Kinaxis
    Ottawa, ON, Canada

    Without a doubt this is an interesting topic which has created a lively debate. While there is much in the article with which I agree, I think there are some fundamental flaws, the greatest of which is discussed by David Elfant in his comments: “... there is a dwindling number of American students graduating from university with the technical abilities to even comprehend the advancements that are being made abroad.”

    Separately, Ian Davis commented that “Companies seeking high rates of income and consumption growth will increasingly look to Asia” (“The new normal”, McKinsey Quarterly, March 2009). Of course this is a point made by David Elfant too.

    Living in a country that is extremely dependent on trade with the US, what I worry about is that the commercialization of technology, for which the US is deservedly praised, will become irrelevant because it will be targeting a market with dwindling buying power (namely, the US and EMEA) while paying too little attention to the areas of emerging demand, particularly China and India. This won’t happen overnight, but we could be living through the tipping point. We only have to look at the emergence of Lenovo and Huawei in China, and Tata and Mittal in India to see the emergence of commercialization innovation in these countries.

    What I worry most about articles such as Amar Bhide’s is that it will lull the west into a state of self-congratulatory complacency just when it should be developing strategies to compete effectively at all levels of the innovation continuum.

    .
  • 9 MARCH 2009
    David Elfant
    Graduate Student
    Oxford University
    United Kingdom

    The author of this article makes the important distinction between innovation and creating wealth. Three levels of innovation are introduced as necessary to derive a product from an initial technological advancement. However, there is clear failure to acknowledge that only...

    .
    David Elfant
    Graduate Student
    Oxford University
    United Kingdom

    The author of this article makes the important distinction between innovation and creating wealth. Three levels of innovation are introduced as necessary to derive a product from an initial technological advancement. However, there is clear failure to acknowledge that only with a profound understanding of “high-order” technologies can the “mid-level” and “ground-level” innovations be made to commercialize a new product.

    Even though certain arguments and policies may be misplaced in promoting only fundamental research that gives rise to high-level innovations, the fact remains that there is a dwindling number of American students graduating from university with the technical abilities to even comprehend the advancements that are being made abroad. It is my firm belief that this is a necessary requirement without which the US may start to fall behind in creating value from innovation.

    The example of the commercial applications of the transistor in the 1950s fails to recognize the historical context in which they were developed – that is, following the massive investment in R&D during the second world war in which legions of scientists had been trained and funded to develop innovations at all three levels.

    It is short-sighted to believe that because lower-level innovations that serve to commercialize new technologies are best conducted close to potential customers, the US will continue to maintain a competitive advantage in this area. Given the technological advances that have led to globalization and the emergence of the Chinese and Indian markets, these arguments may be obsolete already.

    With such an uncertain economic climate and the impending dangers of climate change, the best possible strategy that the US can adopt is one readiness and adaptability. Such characteristics are inherent in the training of scientists.

    .
  • 5 MARCH 2009
    Ketharaman Swaminathan
    Head of Global Business Development
    Oracle Financial Services Software Limited
    India

    Having lived in Germany and seeing those picturesque shops—and having been especially frustrated to see them closed on Sundays which was the only day I had time to do my shopping—I can appreciate Amar Bhide’s take on why American retailers...

    .
    Ketharaman Swaminathan
    Head of Global Business Development
    Oracle Financial Services Software Limited
    India

    Having lived in Germany and seeing those picturesque shops—and having been especially frustrated to see them closed on Sundays which was the only day I had time to do my shopping—I can appreciate Amar Bhide’s take on why American retailers might have absorbed German inventory-reduction technologies better. I’ve always believed that go-to-market is what separates a great idea from blockbuster revenues, so I totally agree with Bhide that the US is way ahead on that count.

    But, my views deviate when it comes to the reason for all this. I don’t believe it has anything to do with great teams or time (150 years), as Bhide asserts. In my opinion, it’s attitude. An average German citizen believes that it’s unfair to make store employees work on Sundays or beyond 6PM on Saturdays. That’s why German shopping hours are much less than American ones, that’s why they’re inefficient. Even today, many Indians use the words ‘crass’ and ‘commercialization’ in the same sentence. It takes a recession like the present one for them to understand the importance of things like commercialization/go-to-market.

    In India and many other parts of the world, invention for the sake of invention is considered as noble, whereas profiting from it is seen as greed. It’s this attitude in many countries outside the US that explains America’s lead in productivity and usage of innovation. This lead will be challenged severely if India and some of these other countries lose this attitude—that could take even more than 150 years. But, if India could build a mobile phone network for close to 300 million subscribers in less than 20 years, why should it take 150 years to start putting innovation to use?

    .
  • 5 MARCH 2009
    Ganesh Ram
    General Manager - Career Planning & Development
    Oracle Financial Services Software
    Mumbai, India

    Excellent article. It’s high time we moved away from a simplistic either/or mindset with respect to innovation and looked at an and-also mindset. Despite flat-worldly access to—and global movement of—information, cultural strengths of different regions and peoples tend to persist,...

    .
    Ganesh Ram
    General Manager - Career Planning & Development
    Oracle Financial Services Software
    Mumbai, India

    Excellent article. It’s high time we moved away from a simplistic either/or mindset with respect to innovation and looked at an and-also mindset. Despite flat-worldly access to—and global movement of—information, cultural strengths of different regions and peoples tend to persist, which can be exploited in a positive sense.

    Americans will likely continue to have an unbeatable lead when it comes to polishing, packaging, positioning, and all aspects of successful marketing in various industries, thus retaining an edge in attracting and nurturing innovative products and services.

    America need not hold on to manufacturing and low-end services and processing if these can be performed better elsewhere.

    .
  • 25 FEBRUARY 2009
    Kam Yew
    Chief Mind Unzipper
    Mindbloom Consulting
    Sydney, Australia

    This is a great article that dispels the hype about innovation. While product innovation is indeed important, it is ultimately application innovations which harness technological innovations that bring about economic benefits. This is a wake-up call for countries to allocate...

    .
    Kam Yew
    Chief Mind Unzipper
    Mindbloom Consulting
    Sydney, Australia

    This is a great article that dispels the hype about innovation. While product innovation is indeed important, it is ultimately application innovations which harness technological innovations that bring about economic benefits. This is a wake-up call for countries to allocate resources for commercialization versus R&D. In fact, with the proliferation of information on technological innovations, a monitoring department to keep track of these and their economic potential should be given priority.

    .
  • 25 FEBRUARY 2009
    David Frank
    Managing Director
    MEDx Associates LLC
    New Jersey, United States

    Yes, indeed, offshore patented technologies can be licensed. It is usually after the fact, while the inventor is off working on the next generation of the technology. As well, the license fees and royalties, sap the profitability of the licensee....

    .
    David Frank
    Managing Director
    MEDx Associates LLC
    New Jersey, United States

    Yes, indeed, offshore patented technologies can be licensed. It is usually after the fact, while the inventor is off working on the next generation of the technology. As well, the license fees and royalties, sap the profitability of the licensee. These are funds that would nominally be invested in developing its own new technology.

    This type of licensing should be thought of as a defensive move, not as the ordinary course of business.

    Lastly, there is no assurance that the patent holder would even want to grant licenses to potential competitors.

    .
  • 25 FEBRUARY 2009
    Ankur Bhatnagar
    VP-International Business
    Unimodal
    Delhi, India

    The most crucial part of Amar Bhide’s argument was in the last two paragraphs. He needs to elaborate in more detail about lesser abilities of Japan, S. Korea and Taiwan in developing and using innovation. How does lower productivity indicate...

    .
    Ankur Bhatnagar
    VP-International Business
    Unimodal
    Delhi, India

    The most crucial part of Amar Bhide’s argument was in the last two paragraphs. He needs to elaborate in more detail about lesser abilities of Japan, S. Korea and Taiwan in developing and using innovation. How does lower productivity indicate this? I don’t mean to say that he is wrong, but he needs to elaborate this assertion.

    .
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