© DIE, 22.9.20051 China and India: Technological upgrading patterns and their implications for other developing countries Tilman Altenburg, German Development.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Rise of the Indian Software Industry Alok Sheel Counsellor Economic Embassy of India Kogod School of Business American University Washington DC September.
Advertisements

© DIE, Asian Drivers and Anchor Countries: The Research Agenda Tilman Altenburg, German Development Institute, Bonn OECD Development Centre.
Asian Drivers and Poor Countries: The Research Agenda Jörg Mayer UNCTAD China and India: Whats in it for Africa? Paris, March 2006.
The Shape of Chinas Future Growth KC Kwok 8 September, 2008.
Bridging the gap between academia and industry Bridging the gap between academia and industry Brazil s roadmap Alberto Rodriguez, Ph.D. The World Bank.
Session I: Technology, Trade and Growth-lessons of Experiences Session I: Technology, Trade and Growth-lessons of Experiences Issues related to technology.
Gender Perspectives in Introduction to Competition Policy Gender Module #6 ITU Workshops on Sustainability in Telecommunication Through Gender & Social.
MNGT 220 Week 8 Tutorial Questions. Overview What do we want you to demonstrate: What do we want you to demonstrate: Practising the competitive analysis.
A Nation of SMEs: The German Experience By: Siegfried Herzog.
STRATEGIES FOR COMPETING IN INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
1 Operations Management, Competitiveness, and Operations Strategy Lecture 1.
1 Chapter 20 New Horizons. 2 Understand the many changing dimensions that shape international business. Learn about and evaluate the international business.
Copyright ©2004, South-Western College Publishing International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition Chapter 7: Trade Policies for the Developing.
1 Sub-Saharan Africa and Europe in a restructuring world François Bourguignon and Pierre Jacquet Paris School of Economics and Agence Française de Développement.
Implications for South Africa Shahid Yusuf October 27 th 2011.
Chapter 1: Expanding Abroad Motivations, Means, and Mentalities
The Strategy of International Business
Strategy in the Global Environment
FDI & Tech Capabilities Khalil Hamdani Lahore School of Economics 27 March 2014.
2013 EDITION Mr. Pierre Vigier Head of Unit Economic Analysis and Indicators.
Lecture 3: Emerging Markets and Elements of Country Risk Analysis.
9-1© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. International Strategy Chapter Nine.
9-1© 2006 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited. International Strategy Chapter Nine.
International Strategy: Creating Value in Global Markets
Agenda for November 2 Review of Chapter 8 International Strategy
Asian Emerging Markets and Development Peter Enderwick Professor of International Business Auckland University of Technology New Zealand Visiting Professor.
Master in Engineering Policy and Management of Technology, 8 th Edition Science, Technology and Innovation Policy GLOBAL STRATEGIES FOR THE DEVELOPMENT.
© economiesuisse,, Challenges for Switzerland‘s Foreign Trade Policy Gerold Bührer, Chairman 36th Annual General Meeting 2010 ARAB-SWISS CHAMBER OF COMMERCE.
International Business 9e
Xiaolan Fu Oxford University DFID-ESRC Growth Research Programme Meeting Overseas Development Institute, London, July 17th, 2015.
Introduction to Management of Technology (MOT)
Professor Song CHEN, Ph.D. Deputy Dean, School of Economics & Management Tongji University Oct. 7, 2013 The Changing National.
1 Rebalancing Asia: Implications for inclusive green growth Dr Alex Bowen Principal Research Fellow, Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and.
1 Efforts to promote Mexico-Japan Complementarities in the Aerospace Sector Office of the Mexico-Japan Economic Partnership Agreement Embassy of Mexico.
1 CASA ASIA Economic Congress 2004 ‘The Recovery of the Japanese Economy and Its Influence in Asia’ November, 2004 Takashi FUKAYA.
HISTORY OF GLOBALIZATION---BRIC
The Emerging High Tech Competitors from Asia, Contrasts between the national systems of innovation and its performance of China and India Professor Sunil.
CHINA, INDIA AND GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT Identifying a research agenda on production and innovation International Conference on Globalisation and Development.
1 About half of all ICT outputs in Canada originate in Ontario MEDT’s Approach: ICT is a priority sector Support for research, researchers and research.
The Strategy of International Business
Facilitating FDI into Europe and Central Asia Working through consulting firms.
PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Gordon Walker McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004 McGraw Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Partnering.
1 International sourcing of IT and business process services Experiences from the United States, the EU and India WTO Symposium on Cross-Border Supply.
Impacts of globalisation on the IT Sector
Strategic Entrepreneurship
1 8 Strategy in the Global Environment. 2 Related Concepts/Theories Theory of comparative advantage – a country is ahead, and all other country’s benefit,
Chapter 4 Globalization in Asia. Paragraph 5 Japan and other tigers The economy in South East Asia is “booming The economy in South East Asia is “booming”
International Business 9e By Charles W.L. Hill McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
HELLENIC REPUBLIC 1 COMPETITIVENESS AND WORLD TRADE.
Lecture 3: Major Economic Systems THE INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT DR(PROF) M AMBASHANKAR.
Welcome to class of Emerging Markets by Dr. Satyendra Singh University of Winnipeg Canada.
1 COMPETITION LAW FORUM Paris 21 June 2006 Competitiveness versus Competition Presentation by Humbert DRABBE Director for Cohesion and Competitiveness,
Technology Transfer and MNCs Courtney Davis Matthew Elias Michael Tang Lalita Urasuk MET AD 655 – International Business, Economics and Cultures Professor.
Entry Strategy and Strategic Alliances. Lecture Review Entry Strategy and Strategic Alliances Firms expanding internationally must decide: which markets.
Growth in East Asia: Innovative Firms in Dynamic Cities Shahid Yusuf World Bank DECRG February 18, 2004.
Private Sector Participation in AID for TRADE Presented by: S.V.Divvaakar, Director Ace Global Ventures Mauritius Pretoria, August, 2006 Towards.
The Indian IT story Presented by Sriram Chandrasekaran.
BREAKTHROUGH? CHINA’S AND INDIA’S TRANSITION FROM PRODUCTION TO INNOVATION TILMAN ALTENBURG GERMAN DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTE, BONN, GERMANY HUBERT SCHMITZ.
©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
"Innovation-based Growth – the Development and the Future Challenges of the Finnish Innovation Environment” Timo Kekkonen Director, Confederation of Finnish.
EXTERNAL INFLUENCES These are factors that the business can not control (External constraints) PESTEL Analysis is a part of the external analysis that.
Chapter 8 Strategy in the Global Environment
Special Economic Zones and Land Acquisition: Issues and Approaches
STRATEGIC THINKING AND PLANNING FOR BUSINESS
Portfolio Committee on Trade and Industry
Malaysia - Trading for the Future
Is this the Asian Century?
Chapter 8 Strategy in the Global Environment
International Management Chapter 1: Assessing the Environment: Political, Economic, Legal and Technological Lesson1: The Global Business Environment, the.
Chapter 8 Strategy in the global Environment
Presentation transcript:

© DIE, China and India: Technological upgrading patterns and their implications for other developing countries Tilman Altenburg, German Development Institute, Bonn OECD Development Centre Paris, 16 March 2006

© DIE, Key questions: 1. To what extent, at what velocity, and in which sectors can we expect China and India to catch up with global technological leaders? 2. How do they manage to catch up? What are the policy lessons? 3. What are the economic consequences for other developing countries?

© DIE, To what extent, at what velocity, and in which sectors can we expect China and India to catch up with global technological leaders?

© DIE, Software industry: India 20 years of spectacular growth. 12 billion US$ exports, 345,000 employment. 80% exports. Several Indian firms emerging as global players. However: Specialisation on lower-end services, BPO- ITES, still low market share in system integration, embedded software, product design etc.

© DIE, Space industry: India Successful development of three sub-systems: satellites, rockets, ground systems. Robotic moon mission planned. Only developing country to develop own remote-sensing satellites. Rockets capable of placing 2 ton satellites in orbit. Increasing local content of core technologies. Systems integration capability (dealing with huge simultaneous & complementary technological developments), several hundred research projects with over 100 universities, research centres and increasing private sector participation Partly commercial success: leading provider of civilian satellites, many countries use Indian rockets. However: Still dependent on subsidies, global consolidation may threaten minor competitors (as in aircraft industry)

© DIE, Automotive industry: China Chinese joint venture partners start producing own cars First exports of national brands Increasing number of own patents Acquisition of auto and autoparts companies Major manufacturers set up R&D centres in China, partly adaptive R&D, partly due to government pressure However: Still basically foreign licenses, little innovation Still 10 years time-lag, reduced from Still 10 years time-lag, reduced from 30 years

© DIE, Personal computer industry: China Worlds leading producer of PCs. Emergence of strong local brands Acquisiton of IBMs PC production However: most critical components imported / licensed Still low degree of appropriation of technological capabilities

© DIE, Are China & India catching up? Still distant from technological frontier Technological gap rapidly decreasing. Difficult to assess how long it will take to close the remaining gap. Very different perceptions! Need for better proxies for technological mastery/ upgrading

© DIE, Are China & India catching up? Hypothesis: Substantial further progress likely because of - Global economic shift towards Asia. China and India emerging as worlds leading markets - Pan-Asian production system benefits China (advantages in manufacturing combined with capital and know-how from Taiwan, Singapore, Japan, Korea) - Strong bargaining power (trading technology for markets). Major manufacturers set up R&D centres in China and India - Strong investment in human capital - Global network of qualified expatriates - High savings & foreign exchange reserves => investment in R&D + acquiring technology firms + hiring return migrants

© DIE, How do they manage to catch up? What are the policy lessons?

© DIE, Indias space industry: Ambitious space programme started in 1962, national pet project. Science-driven, strong government support Building on international cooperation with NASA, SU, France, ESA. Strong focal institution (ISRO): 11,000 scientists Private sector came in lately. ISRO helped to develop technology firms Indias software industry: Early focus on human capital building, excellent universities and technical colleges Until 1984 no specific promotion policy for IT, even disincentives Oversupply of IT engineers => emigration and body shopping => strong diaspora as facilitators for Indias market access, return migration. Not result of visionary industrial policy, dynamic development surprised India Luck: Window of opportunity when oversupply of engineers met new technological standard that made outsourcing possible. Very heterogeneous policy trajectories

© DIE, China`s automotive industry Competence building through various phases of industrial policy: Centralized planning, SOE => from 1978 ISI => from 1994 increasing use of bargaining power Centralized planning, SOE => from 1978 ISI => from 1994 increasing use of bargaining power after 2001 WTO, liberalisation, carrot and stick approach. Still discretionary government influence. after 2001 WTO, liberalisation, carrot and stick approach. Still discretionary government influence. Trading technology for markets. Acquisition of foreign auto parts and car makers to get access to technology, brand names, markets Chinas PC industry Started as an extension of Taiwanese computer industry Export assembly base Increasing backward integration from comparative advantage in low-cost assembly, acquisition of foreign technology companies

© DIE, Policy lessons? 1Still feasible to catch up with technological leaders 2Very different trajectories may lead to technolo- gical upgrading 3In the long run, trajectories converge towards similar patterns of mature National Innovation Systems 4Strategic vision, political leadership & coherent sector policies often crucial, but not always 5High emphasis on skills development and increasingly on R&D 6Neither China nor India offer conducive investment climate in the traditional sense. Do they perform well because of or despite this? 7Especially China negotiates incentives, puts pressure on foreign investors.

© DIE, What are the economic consequences for other developing countries?

© DIE, Technological progress makes Chinese and Indian growth sustainable => growth prospects of world economy. 2Sustained growth increases demand for raw materials and improves terms of trade for net commodity exporters 3Especially strong pull-effects for Asian neighbours 4More competitive pressure in knowledge-intensive production => rising entry barriers for other DCs 5New South-South technology alliances likely to emerge (IBSA, China-Brazil space technology) 6Rising labour costs: will China and India move out of very low-cost manufacturing? 7Provision of technologies more appropriate to DC needs ? 8Greater role in global governance structures. Aid for raw materials