Product development, innovation networks, infrastructure and agglomeration economies

被引:0
|
作者
Charlie Karlsson
机构
[1] Jönköping International Business School,
[2] Jönköping University,undefined
[3] P.O. Box 1026,undefined
[4] S-55111 Jönköping,undefined
[5] Sweden (Phone: +4636156956,undefined
[6] Fax: +4636165069,undefined
[7] e-mail: Charlie.Karlsson@ihh.hj.se),undefined
来源
关键词
Information Technology; Empirical Result; Product Development; Market Economy; Theoretical Perspective;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The continuos inflow of new products is a fundamental condition for a well-functioning market economy. It has been argued that new products are the outcome of a process which is based upon the principle “novelty by combination”. This characterization applies well to the type of product development analyzed in this paper, which comprises the development of new products and the renewal of old products in the Swedish engineering industry through the adoption of a specific type of innovation, namely the incorporation of information technology based components and their pertinent software, i.e. microelectronics. According to the theoretical perspective presented in the paper, a new or a renewed product may result from “random collisions” or from a cautious matching between technical opportunities and customer needs. A necessary condition for such “collisions” or matching to occur is communication and, hence, communication in innovation networks is one key factor in product development. The empirical part of the paper contains an empirical test of the role of establishment characteristics, innovation networks, infrastructure endowment and agglomeration economies for the first use of micro-electronics in product development at the plant level. The empirical results seem to confirm the importance of innovation networks as well as of infrastructure endowment and agglomeration economies for an early use of micro-electronics in product development.
引用
收藏
页码:235 / 258
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] URBAN AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES AND INNOVATION: A CASE OF TAIWANESE HIGH-TECH INDUSTRY
    Chiang, Shu-Hen
    Shieh Chich-Jen
    ACTUAL PROBLEMS OF ECONOMICS, 2010, : 8 - 17
  • [22] How does agglomeration promote the product innovation of Chinese firms?
    Zhang, Hongyong
    CHINA ECONOMIC REVIEW, 2015, 35 : 105 - 120
  • [23] Collaborative Development of Innovation Industrial Agglomeration and Urbanization
    Yu Huixin
    Xia Zheng
    Ma Zhidong
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2016 INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON EDUCATION, MANAGEMENT SCIENCE AND ECONOMICS (ICEMSE 2016), 2016, 65 : 27 - 30
  • [24] The identification of agglomeration economies
    Combes, Pierre-Philippe
    Duranton, Gilles
    Gobillon, Laurent
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC GEOGRAPHY, 2011, 11 (02) : 253 - 266
  • [25] EQUILIBRIUM WITH AGGLOMERATION ECONOMIES
    LINDSEY, JH
    PRATT, JW
    ZECKHAUSER, RJ
    REGIONAL SCIENCE AND URBAN ECONOMICS, 1995, 25 (03) : 249 - 260
  • [26] Urban agglomeration policy and coordinated road infrastructure development
    Wang, Changyan
    Wu, Jing
    Wu, Shuping
    TRANSPORTATION RESEARCH PART A-POLICY AND PRACTICE, 2025, 195
  • [27] PROJECT "DEVELOPMENT OF WATER AND MUNICIPAL INFRASTRUCTURE OF THE METKOVIC AGGLOMERATION"
    不详
    GRADEVINAR, 2025, 77 (02):
  • [28] Focussing product innovation and fostering economies of scale based on adaptive product platforms
    Schuh, G.
    Lenders, M.
    Arnoscht, J.
    CIRP ANNALS-MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY, 2009, 58 (01) : 131 - 134
  • [29] Product innovation in emerging economies: Product architecture and organisational capabilities in Geely and Tata
    Wang H.
    Kimble C.
    Balcet G.
    Wang, Hua (hwang@em-lyon.com), 2018, Inderscience Publishers, 29, route de Pre-Bois, Case Postale 856, CH-1215 Geneva 15, CH-1215, Switzerland (18) : 384 - 405
  • [30] Brazilian municipalities: agglomeration economies and levels of development in 1997 and 2007
    da Silva Catela, Eva Yamila
    Goncalves, Flavio
    Porcile, Gabriel
    CEPAL REVIEW, 2010, (101): : 145 - 161