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This book aims to improve the understanding of the relationship
between cultural diversity and international economic integration
and its implications for global governance of the audio-visual
sector. The national audio-visual policies of a number of countries
- including Canada, Egypt, France, Germany, Italy, India and the UK
- are compared in order to assess their potential impacts and
restrictive effects on international trade and investment. The
variety of approaches used by the contributors reflects the wide
differences among national audio-visual systems and offers a rich
perspective on how they can be analysed. The lessons drawn from
these national case studies are placed in context by up-to-date
original analysis of the constraints arising from the WTO system.
Scholars and professionals in the audio-visual sector and in
international trade negotiations would be interested in the issues
discussed in the book, given their importance in shaping the
institutional environment of cultural and economic activities in
the audio-visual sector.
The current trend towards globalization is posing a substantial
challenge to SME clusters to restructure and reach out to distant
markets and knowledge sources, while at the same time exploiting
the advantages of local factors and agglomeration. This book
represents a first attempt to analyze these issues in detail,
employing novel empirical evidence. The authors focus on Small and
Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) in Italy and Taiwan, two countries
in which these businesses characterize the national industrial
structure. They find that in the current climate of globalization,
there is no best practice model for organizing an industrial
cluster since a diversity of successful institutional arrangements
is possible. They demonstrate that over time SME clusters can
evolve and that globalization can reshape their upgrading options
by providing a variety of international knowledge linkages. Thus,
the authors conclude that the development of local and global
networks and new interactive modes of knowledge creation, which
have co-evolved as a result of globalization, have provided the
necessary conditions for competitive survival. Taking a
multidisciplinary approach, the authors utilize a number of
analytical tools to evaluate their survey data and present an
original comparison between the experiences of two countries that
are facing the challenges of globalization, often with differing
strategies. This book will be of great interest to industrial and
international economists, policymakers, and corporate and SME
managers.
The current trend towards globalization is posing a substantial
challenge to SME clusters to restructure and reach out to distant
markets and knowledge sources, while at the same time exploiting
the advantages of local factors and agglomeration. This book
represents a first attempt to analyze these issues in detail,
employing novel empirical evidence. The authors focus on Small and
Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) in Italy and Taiwan, two countries
in which these businesses characterize the national industrial
structure. They find that in the current climate of globalization,
there is no best practice model for organizing an industrial
cluster since a diversity of successful institutional arrangements
is possible. They demonstrate that over time SME clusters can
evolve and that globalization can reshape their upgrading options
by providing a variety of international knowledge linkages. Thus,
the authors conclude that the development of local and global
networks and new interactive modes of knowledge creation, which
have co-evolved as a result of globalization, have provided the
necessary conditions for competitive survival. Taking a
multidisciplinary approach, the authors utilize a number of
analytical tools to evaluate their survey data and present an
original comparison between the experiences of two countries that
are facing the challenges of globalization, often with differing
strategies. This book will be of great interest to industrial and
international economists, policymakers, and corporate and SME
managers.
Europe's performance relative to the US and countries in Asia is a
topic that greatly preoccupies policymakers who are concerned that
the European Union is losing ground compared to other, more
dynamic, parts of the world. This book presents the scale and scope
of the challenges that Europe faces in adjusting to globalization
and advances in technology. The evidence assembled in this book
points to trends in European Union performance that policymakers
will find disconcerting. In many areas, Europe has not kept pace
with the technological advances of competitors and seems to have
lost its dynamism. Employment creation has been lacklustre, new
specializations have been slow to emerge and the rate of innovation
has been disappointing. The core message in this book is that the
problems Europe faces in key areas such as growth, equality and
employment are all related to its failure to take sufficient
advantage of technological advances, particularly the information
and communication technology (ICT) revolution. It is concluded that
a coherent European strategy for upgrading technological capability
and embedding new technologies, especially ICTs, in society is long
overdue. This book will be indispensable to scholars and
policymakers in the areas of economic growth, international
competitiveness, innovation, regional development and European
studies.
The Economic Impact of Digital Technologies offers a profoundly
illuminating examination of ICT transformations in Europe and its
critical role in greater social inequality. It presents scholars
and policy makers with original and practical tools to benchmark
and assess the ICT diffusion and inclusion process. The core
message of book is that a coherent European strategy for embedding
ICT technologies in society is long overdue. Social differences in
ICT use persist and are in some cases widening, yet despite this
fact there is a dearth of research on remedying digital
inequalities. This is of particular importance given that relative
levels of ICT use, investment and research can often explain
variations in economic performance between industrialized
countries. The purpose of this book is to fill the gap in the
literature by presenting key evidence on the economic benefits (and
costs) deriving from investment in an inclusive information
society. The authors propose indicators and indexes of digital
development and e-Inclusion (and its flip-side e-exclusion) to
assess the relationship between inclusive ICT and wider economic
and social performance in Europe. Presenting the methodology to
monitor countries' performance and ICT use, together with original
measures and policy suggestions, this book will be indispensable to
policy makers, scholars and postgraduate students in a variety of
areas including economic growth, innovation, industrial and
organizational studies, information and technology, European
studies, and public and social policy. Contents: Preface
Introduction 1. Digital Development in Europe: A Theoretical
Framework 2. The Internet in Everyday Life 3. A Metrics for Digital
Development 4. Digital Inequalities in Europe 5. The Economic
Impact of e-Inclusion: A Review of the Literature 6. The Economic
Impact of Digital Technologies: An Empirical Analysis on European
Countries 7. The Impact of e-Inclusion in Europe: A Scenario
Analysis 8. Digital Development: An Overall EU Policy Framework
Appendix: EDDI European Digital Development Index: Definition of
Methodology References Index With contributions from: Marco Bee,
Sara Bentivegna, Giovanni Di Franco, Giuseppe Espa, Rinaldo
Evangelista, Roberto Gabriele, Paolo Guerrieri, Valentina Meliciani
and Jacques Pelkmans
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