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(2001) Capitalism and democracy in the 21st century, Heidelberg, Physica.

Capitalism, profits and innovation in the new techno-economic paradigm

John Cantwell, Grazia D. Santangelo

pp. 137-163

Innovative profits (of the kind conceptualized by Schumpeter) are today being increasingly created through international corporate networks for technological development. Such profits through innovation are encouraged by newer more flexible organizational forms, and further encouraged (unlike in the conventional perspective on profits and on the incentive to innovate) by knowledge flows between firms. Our empirical evidence, based on US patent data, shows that multinational companies are currently more likely to develop abroad technologies which are less science-based, and less dependent upon tacit knowledge. However, within the science-based industries firms may generate abroad some technologies which are heavily dependent on tacit knowledge, but normally in fields that lie outside their own core technological competencies. We find some evidence of a convergence in corporate technological diversification across large firms, facilitated by the now common spread in the use of information and communication technologies (ICT) as an integrator of formerly separate technological systems. This has led smaller firms to diversify, but giant firms to consolidate activity around those technologies that have become most interrelated.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-662-11287-8_8

Full citation:

Cantwell, J. , Santangelo, G. D. (2001)., Capitalism, profits and innovation in the new techno-economic paradigm, in D. C. Mueller & U. Cantner (eds.), Capitalism and democracy in the 21st century, Heidelberg, Physica, pp. 137-163.

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