|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
Technological innovation is a core aspect of corporate and national
competitiveness and it is not only complex—requiring cooperation
and coordination among many stakeholders—but it also involves
high risk due to uncertainty. Financial markets are a key to
successful technological innovation. This book looks at how
traditional financing and non-traditional ones transform corporate
innovation strategy. This book reviews Korean companies to
illustrate the impact of financialization on technological
innovation through the relationships among financialization,
managerial myopia and short-termism of innovation strategy. It does
so by conducting an empirical study using Korean firm and USPTO
data from the period of 1980 to 2017. By analyzing the innovation
capabilities of Korean companies and presenting indicators of
technological competitiveness, it offers insights into how
financialization has influenced organizational behaviour, causing
them to shift strategy formulation, decision making for production,
investment and technological innovation away from a long-term
perspective to short-term one. This concise book will be of
interest to those interested in strategy and entrepreneurship
innovation, especially policy makers focusing on financialization
or national level innovation strategies.
The contributors to this book explore the current situation of
North Korea in various aspects and provide policy suggestions for
North Korea to become part of the international community and
achieve sustainable development. Focusing on three key areas of
economic development, namely, international sectors, agriculture
and urban development, and energy and environment, this book lays
out recommendations and prospects for North Korea. Authors assess
the current situation of North Korea, explore preconditions for
becoming a member of the international community, and suggest
policies necessary for the sustainable development of North Korea.
They cover a wide range of areas including reforestation, WTO
accession, and the potential for economic integration with South
Korea. These evaluations draw on both what is understood about the
current situation in North Korea and comparisons with other
countries and territories. This book will be a valuable resource
for scholars and policy planners who focus on North Korea.
Technological innovation is a core aspect of corporate and national
competitiveness and it is not only complex-requiring cooperation
and coordination among many stakeholders-but it also involves high
risk due to uncertainty. Financial markets are a key to successful
technological innovation. This book looks at how traditional
financing and non-traditional ones transform corporate innovation
strategy. This book reviews Korean companies to illustrate the
impact of financialization on technological innovation through the
relationships among financialization, managerial myopia and
short-termism of innovation strategy. It does so by conducting an
empirical study using Korean firm and USPTO data from the period of
1980 to 2017. By analyzing the innovation capabilities of Korean
companies and presenting indicators of technological
competitiveness, it offers insights into how financialization has
influenced organizational behaviour, causing them to shift strategy
formulation, decision making for production, investment and
technological innovation away from a long-term perspective to
short-term one. This concise book will be of interest to those
interested in strategy and entrepreneurship innovation, especially
policy makers focusing on financialization or national level
innovation strategies.
The contributors to this book explore the current situation of
North Korea in various aspects and provide policy suggestions for
North Korea to become part of the international community and
achieve sustainable development. Focusing on three key areas of
economic development, namely, international sectors, agriculture
and urban development, and energy and environment, this book lays
out recommendations and prospects for North Korea. Authors assess
the current situation of North Korea, explore preconditions for
becoming a member of the international community, and suggest
policies necessary for the sustainable development of North Korea.
They cover a wide range of areas including reforestation, WTO
accession, and the potential for economic integration with South
Korea. These evaluations draw on both what is understood about the
current situation in North Korea and comparisons with other
countries and territories. This book will be a valuable resource
for scholars and policy planners who focus on North Korea.
Korea was the first non-G7 member and Asian country to host the
recent G20 Summit, acting as a bridge between advanced and
developing nations. At the G20 Seoul Summit, green growth as well
as development and a global financial safety net were on the
agenda. Against this backdrop, the aim of this book is to comment
on and suggest how to go about setting agendas and shaping further
discussions of future summits. The book consists of three major
parts: the first part discusses the role of G20 in reforming
international monetary system, the status of the IMF since the
European sovereign debt crisis, the use of the yuan as the world's
reserve currency, and the establishment of a more resilient global
financial system. The second part examines trade measures in times
of volatile energy prices, the impact of merchandise price
volatility on the G20 economies, the EU's pricing policies and the
world's price volatility, high oil prices and Russia, and oil
markets in South America. The third part reviews G20's financing
for green growth, green growth and sustainable development within
the G20 framework, and G20's role in addressing climate change and
green growth. This book offers an in-depth review of major issues
discussed at the recent summits and will be of interest to policy
makers.
This book covers nine countries of ASEAN and the East Asian area,
including major Asian countries, and compares their respective
policies to attract Foreign Direct Investments (FDI). Through
comparative study of FDI promotion policies, this book will give
policy makers in the area of FDI promotion an overview and
comparison of the FDI policies of other countries. In addition,
researchers at graduate, post-graduate or professional level will
gain from the econometric methodology and detailed definitions of
various spillover effects (horizontal and vertical), which will be
beneficial to their research. In addition to FDI policy comparison,
this book focuses on the various spillover effects of FDI. It
separates it into categories: own productivity effects;
intra-industry spillover effects; and inter-industry spillover
effects (forward and backward linkage effects). While most other
studies have only taken econometric tests on own-productivity and
intra-industry spillovers, a key advantage to this book is that it
also covers the separate effects of inter-industry linkages.
Through policy comparison and econometric tests on various
spillover effects on economic growth, employment and exports, this
book will give policy makers and researchers an innovative and
constructive guide to FDI.
Korea was the first non-G7 member and Asian country to host the
recent G20 Summit, acting as a bridge between advanced and
developing nations. At the G20 Seoul Summit, green growth as well
as development and a global financial safety net were on the
agenda. Against this backdrop, the aim of this book is to comment
on and suggest how to go about setting agendas and shaping further
discussions of future summits. The book consists of three major
parts: the first part discusses the role of G20 in reforming
international monetary system, the status of the IMF since the
European sovereign debt crisis, the use of the yuan as the world's
reserve currency, and the establishment of a more resilient global
financial system. The second part examines trade measures in times
of volatile energy prices, the impact of merchandise price
volatility on the G20 economies, the EU's pricing policies and the
world's price volatility, high oil prices and Russia, and oil
markets in South America. The third part reviews G20's financing
for green growth, green growth and sustainable development within
the G20 framework, and G20's role in addressing climate change and
green growth. This book offers an in-depth review of major issues
discussed at the recent summits and will be of interest to policy
makers.
This book covers nine countries of ASEAN and the East Asian area,
including major Asian countries, and compares their respective
policies to attract Foreign Direct Investments (FDI). Through
comparative study of FDI promotion policies, this book will give
policy makers in the area of FDI promotion an overview and
comparison of the FDI policies of other countries. In addition,
researchers at graduate, post-graduate or professional level will
gain from the econometric methodology and detailed definitions of
various spillover effects (horizontal and vertical), which will be
beneficial to their research. In addition to FDI policy comparison,
this book focuses on the various spillover effects of FDI. It
separates it into categories: own productivity effects;
intra-industry spillover effects; and inter-industry spillover
effects (forward and backward linkage effects). While most other
studies have only taken econometric tests on own-productivity and
intra-industry spillovers, a key advantage to this book is that it
also covers the separate effects of inter-industry linkages.
Through policy comparison and econometric tests on various
spillover effects on economic growth, employment and exports, this
book will give policy makers and researchers an innovative and
constructive guide to FDI.
|
|