An extraordinary opportunity offered by the Du Pont Company gave
Professor Hollander free access both to all detailed cost and much
investment data related to rayon manufacture at a number of plants,
covering a period of thirty years and to a wide range of informed
personnel and officers. These data enabled Professor Hollander to
make an unprecedented study of a large industrial firm for the
purpose of measuring the contribution of various sources of
improvement to increased efficiency. From the mass of information
available, he has selected sound technical details and concepts,
excluded all irrelevant material, and presented a carefully
organized case study showing how technical change accounts for a
very high proportion of the increases in productivity.
Specifically, this information includes descriptions of the
contributions of various types of technical change to production
cost reductions, quantitative estimates of the contributions of
technical change and economies of scale to increased efficiency,
and analyses of the relation between technical change and
investment and of the sources of new technology.The microeconomic
approach is related to certain macrostudies of productivity
increase, and several policy implications are drawn.This study
should be of great interest to a wide audience including
economists, economic historians, and technologists. All those
concerned with the problems of economic growth, industrial
structure, patent protection, technical invention, research and
development, and the general progress of civilian industrial
technology will find this book a valuable addition to their
libraries.
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