Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- Preface: the ICC vision
- Historical overview and dynamics
- Editorial note
- A Global systemic transformations
- B Governance of global trade
- C Poverty and global inequities
- D The long view on interlocking crises
- Editorial introduction
- D1 Trade and sustainable development: the ends must shape the means
- D2 Trade and climate change: the linkage
- D3 Destructive trade winds: trade, consumption and resource constraints
- D4 Trade and energy: a new clean energy deal
- D5 Agriculture and international trade
- D6 Water scarcity: how trade can make a difference
- D7 Water resources: a national security issue for the Middle East
- D8 Trade, technology transfer and institutional catch-up
- D9 A frail reed: the geopolitics of climate change
- E Global business responsibilities
- Conclusion: the imperative of inclusive global growth
- Index
D8 - Trade, technology transfer and institutional catch-up
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on contributors
- Foreword
- Preface: the ICC vision
- Historical overview and dynamics
- Editorial note
- A Global systemic transformations
- B Governance of global trade
- C Poverty and global inequities
- D The long view on interlocking crises
- Editorial introduction
- D1 Trade and sustainable development: the ends must shape the means
- D2 Trade and climate change: the linkage
- D3 Destructive trade winds: trade, consumption and resource constraints
- D4 Trade and energy: a new clean energy deal
- D5 Agriculture and international trade
- D6 Water scarcity: how trade can make a difference
- D7 Water resources: a national security issue for the Middle East
- D8 Trade, technology transfer and institutional catch-up
- D9 A frail reed: the geopolitics of climate change
- E Global business responsibilities
- Conclusion: the imperative of inclusive global growth
- Index
Summary
Starting with David Ricardo, economists have examined how national differences in technological capabilities give rise to specialization and trade. Since then a large strand of the economic literature has been concerned with the intricacies of the relationship between trade and technology. Three types of interaction can be envisaged:
In learning-by-doing, trade increases the size of markets and the scale of specialization with positive spillovers on the domestic production of knowledge and accumulation of experience. Specialization may switch from sectors with low technological spillovers (e.g. primary goods) to sectors with important learning-by-doing effects (e.g. low-tech manufacturing goods).
In learning-by-importing, foreign technology gets used or imitated. Trade transfers foreign technologies to the domestic economy or lets domestic firms improve their own technologies or products through reverse engineering and imitation.
In learning-by-exporting, exporting firms learn by observing their competitors on international markets and aim to reach the same efficiency as their competitors by adopting their technologies.
Trade as a channel of technology diffusion
Together with foreign direct investment (FDI) and the diaspora, trade counts as one of the most important mechanisms for transferring technologies and diffusing innovation. In fact, trade and innovation are mutually reinforcing. Innovation gives birth to technological advantage which, together with differences in factor endowments, is the source of comparative advantage which in turn drives trade. Trade and investment affect innovation through technology transfer, competition effects, economies of scale and spillovers. Intellectual property protection matters too in stimulating technology diffusion.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Peace and Prosperity through World TradeAchieving the 2019 Vision, pp. 222 - 226Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010