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Government’s Role in Innovation
Tallenna

Government’s Role in Innovation

sidottu, 1992
englanti
Inadequate investment in innovation is particularly costly in today's globally competitive environment where continued technological advancements are critical to sustaining economic prosperity. The government has a critical role in ensuring that society's general interest in innovation, and the public good associated with innovation, is represented in private-sector decision making. This can be accomplished through a variety of programmes and initiatives that reward innovation at all levels. The various activities that make this possible fall into two general categories: (1) the creation and maintenance of a legal environment that encourages private sector investment in innovation (patents and the relaxation of antitrust); and (2) the provision of incentives to overcome the natural inclination of private parties to consider only their private benefits when choosing the level of innovation in which to invest (governmental grants and contracts to targeted tax incentives). The role of government, more specifically, can be found in three key areas: funding of research and development performed in the private section; funding of federal laboratory research activities and the effective transfer of that knowledge to the private sector; and encouraging the industry - university collaboration in research and development. It is these three areas of research that generate technologies fundamental to increasing the rate of technological development in the private sector, and it is these three areas that are the focus of this book.
Painos
1992 ed.
ISBN
9780792392613
Kieli
englanti
Paino
446 grammaa
Julkaisupäivä
31.8.1992
Kustantaja
Springer
Sivumäärä
194