Comparative study of policies on technology and industry in the Caribbean and their effects on development

Includes bibliography

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Otros Autores: NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: ECLAC 2014
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/27535
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spelling oai-11362-275352019-05-09T15:43:07Z Comparative study of policies on technology and industry in the Caribbean and their effects on development NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe COMPETENCIA DESARROLLO ECONOMICO POLITICA DE CIENCIA Y TECNOLOGIA POLITICA INDUSTRIAL SECTOR PRIVADO SECTOR PUBLICO COMPETITION ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INDUSTRIAL POLICY PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY Includes bibliography Executive Summary One of the major challenges facing developing countries is to attain high levels of competitiveness in all areas in order to effect the necessary transformation of their production structures. Technological development and innovation are identified as key factors in the attempt to meet this challenge. In many ways technology, in the broadest sense, has become a sine qua non for attaining and maintaining competitiveness, which is itself considered one of the imperatives of successful industrial development. Similarly, in the Caribbean, science and technology are identified as core components of the development process. While technological development and its link to competitiveness has long been recognised, countries of the Caribbean, like most developing countries, depend on technology transfer more than technological development for their needs. The often-cited reason is that a particular problem of developing countries is the lack of finance needed for endogenous research for technological development. There exist, therefore, a number of programmes promoting technology transfer from developing countries. While some countries have been able to take advantage of these transfers and benefit from them, the overall record of technology transfer to developing countries has not been promising. The results suggest that there is no real substitute for indigenous technology generation to augment imported technologies. In addition, technology and technological innovation are generally preceded by the development of a scientific orientation within society. Together these form the basis of the traditional science and technology system that has contributed to the success of the industrialisation effort in many countries. An analysis of science and technology policies in the subregion do not seem to deviate much from the long-established model of externally-propelled development. Whether in finance or know-how, the emphasis continues to be on how to lure resources into the subregion, with minimal indigenous investment. Hence the policies have focussed on incentives to foreign investors rather than on research and development and indigenous capacity building. In so doing policies have ignored, to a large extent, the agricultural base of the economy and the institutions and investments needed to transform that base from raw materials to value-added products. There is therefore an urgent need for programmes that would develop simple and accessible rule-of-thumb approaches for policy formulation and implementation which would facilitate development and establishment of robust and effective policies. 2014-01-02T23:14:30Z 2014-01-02T23:14:30Z 2003-09-29 Texto Documento Completo http://hdl.handle.net/11362/27535 LC/CAR/G.752 en application/pdf CARIBE CARIBBEAN REGION ECLAC
institution Cepal
collection Cepal
language English
topic COMPETENCIA
DESARROLLO ECONOMICO
POLITICA DE CIENCIA Y TECNOLOGIA
POLITICA INDUSTRIAL
SECTOR PRIVADO
SECTOR PUBLICO
COMPETITION
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
INDUSTRIAL POLICY
PRIVATE SECTOR
PUBLIC SECTOR
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY
spellingShingle COMPETENCIA
DESARROLLO ECONOMICO
POLITICA DE CIENCIA Y TECNOLOGIA
POLITICA INDUSTRIAL
SECTOR PRIVADO
SECTOR PUBLICO
COMPETITION
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
INDUSTRIAL POLICY
PRIVATE SECTOR
PUBLIC SECTOR
SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY POLICY
Comparative study of policies on technology and industry in the Caribbean and their effects on development
description Includes bibliography
author2 NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe
author_facet NU. CEPAL. Sede Subregional para el Caribe
format Texto
title Comparative study of policies on technology and industry in the Caribbean and their effects on development
title_short Comparative study of policies on technology and industry in the Caribbean and their effects on development
title_full Comparative study of policies on technology and industry in the Caribbean and their effects on development
title_fullStr Comparative study of policies on technology and industry in the Caribbean and their effects on development
title_full_unstemmed Comparative study of policies on technology and industry in the Caribbean and their effects on development
title_sort comparative study of policies on technology and industry in the caribbean and their effects on development
publisher ECLAC
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/27535
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