This study was motivated by an awareness of the ever-growing
importance of technology on productivity and power in the
information age. It examines the relationship among national
security, economic competition, and technology. An underlying
premise is that in an era of diminished military confrontation,
economic and technological power are acquiring enhanced importance
in national security considerations. Green believes that this is
bound to promote closer coordination between government and private
industry, but not without tensions. Using both a public policy and
an economic focus, his work seeks to clarify the debate on high
technology industrial policy and to address the policy question of
whether and how government should respond to competitive assaults
in strategic industries.
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