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The Source of Innovation in China

Highly Innovative Systems

Y Zhang editor Y Zhou editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Palgrave Macmillan

Published:28th May '15

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Source of Innovation in China cover

Given the most popular understanding of Chinese comparative advantage is their low labour cost, The Source of Innovation in China argues the fundamental source for Chinese economic growth is its innovation. Based on case studies and surveys collected from 600 firms, this book describes competitive advantages of successful Chinese enterprises.

After a glorious past of innovation second to none, China lost the train of the Industrial Revolution and had to pay dearly with the "century of humiliation". The lesson has been learned. One of the key factors of China´s galloping economic development of the last third of a century is the leadership's obsession with science, technology and education. Deng Xiaoping considered technology the main factor of production. Besides, China knows that to escape the "middle income trap" it has to move towards a knowledge economy. Against conventional wisdom, Yingying Zhang and Yu Zhou shows that it is innovation, along with low-cost, that underpins China´s economic development. They defines the sources and strategic focus of Chinese innovation, and emphasizes the relevance of cultural factors. The speed of China´s catching-up in science and technology will determine the pace of its economic growth, of its penetration of international markets and of its transformation into a true great power.

Eugenio Bregolat, Former Ambassador of Spain in China and Author of The Second Revolution in China

The thesis of this book is that China's economic success is based on innovation, rather than inexpensive labor. Expectations that China's economic rise will stall due to rising labor costs thus may be misplaced. An incremental innovation dynamic identified by the authors, spread widely through industries at different levels of technology, suggests that China's economy can sustain higher wages but can it take global leadership in innovation? Rather than relying on technology transfer for access to advanced technology, can China produce more fundamental forms of innovation that derive from university-industry government (triple helix) interactions based on an open Civil Society?

Henry Etzkowitz, President Triple Helix Association (THA), visiting Professor at London University and Edinburgh University, UK

Manufacturing development in China is on the ground of three advantages: low-cost human resources, cheap raw material availability and direct support from the government. However, if we deny the considerable innovative capacity of enterprises in China and if we accept that innovation is the key factor for economic growth in a region/country, it is a real paradox that a country has weak innovation but high value of increasing rate of the GDP. This volume, basic on a broad innovation definition and affirmation of China's innovation capability, tries to explain the source of the innovation capacity as the result of the government having implemented innovation strategy for recent decades. It squares up the humanistic factors such as strategy, culture and social network, highlighting China's specific characteristics in innovation.

Chunyan Zhou, Editor for Journal of Knowledge-based Innovation in China (2011-2013)

ISBN: 9781137335050

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 490g

253 pages