1st Edition

Government Policy and Program Impacts on Technology Development, Transfer, and Commercialization International Perspectives

By Kimball Marshall, William Piper Copyright 2006
    348 Pages
    by Routledge

    348 Pages
    by Routledge

    In recent decades, government-funded technologies have produced radar, microwave ovens, modern cell phone systems, the Internet, new materials for aircraft and motor vehicles, and new medical instrumentation.

    This first-of-its-kind book examines how access to technology is affected by government policies and government-sponsored programs.


    Government Policy and Program Impacts on Technology Development, Transfer, and Commercialization: International Perspectives provides an easy-to-read overview of the field and several studies serving as examples to guide government policymakers and private sector decision makers. This forward-looking book also forecasts the potential impacts of government regulation upon the field and presents provocative discussions of the ethical implications of the cross-cultural and cross-national challenges facing technologically developed nations in the global economy.

    This book reviews this broad field by first providing an overview of the goals of government technology policies and programs as well as of generic types of government technology programs. Next, it presents carefully selected studies that illustrate the potential impacts of government decisions upon marketing constraints, industry acceptance of regulatory requirements, economic development, gross domestic product, and the choices firms make when it comes to location, competitiveness, product development, and other factors. The final chapters explore ethical considerations from a global perspective. These chapters also explore the implications of these considerations in relation to the success of governmental and private sector technology transfer and commercialization programs. The macromarketing perspective taken by the contributors serves to ground the impacts of government technology policies and programs in practical implications for economic development, business productivity, and quality of life.

    The contributors to this unique collection share their expertise on government sponsorship of technology research, the impact of government regulation upon technology marketing and economic development, the effects of government policies on business practices, intellectual property rights, and much more.

    Government Policy and Program Impacts on Technology Development, Transfer, and Commercialization shows how evolving technology and government policy changes have affected:

    • the commercialization of music—new media, piracy problems, consumer choices and costs, and changes in the radio and concert promotion industries
    • the adoption of new household technology
    • licensure requirements for telemedicine—with an essential overview of telemedicine plus examinations of relevant governmental regulations and potential applications
    • patents, copyrights, trademarks, licensing, and proprietary information
    • scrap tire disposal—new alternatives for a chronic waste disposal problem
    • food product development
    • state-owned enterprises—with a case study illustrating how a stagnant state-owned company quickly evolved into China’s leading firm in the textile machinery field

    • Introduction (Kimball P. Marshall, William S. Piper, and Walter W. Wymer)
    • An Overview of Potential Government Impacts on Technology Transfer and Commercialization (Kimball P. Marshall)
    • Perceived Impacts of Government Regulations on Technology Transfers (Marina Onken, Caroline Fisher, and Jing Li)
    • Building Capable Organizations via Technological Innovation: A Study of China’s Leading Textile Machinery Company (Jifu Wang and Sharon L. Oswald)
    • The Effects of Changing Technology and Government Policy on the Commercialization of Music (Gregory K. Faulk, Robert P. Lambert, and Clyde Philip Rolston)
    • Government Programs and Diffusion of Innovations in Taiwan: An Empirical Study of Household Technology Adoption Rates (Maxwell K. Hsu and Hani I. Mesak)
    • Telemedicine from a Macromarketing Viewpoint: A Critical Evaluation with Proposed Licensing Strategies (Ashish Chandra, Charles E. Pettry, Jr., and David P. Paul, III)
    • Patents, Copyrights, and Trademarks in the Early Twenty-First Century: The New Relevance of Some Old Concepts of Intellectual Property Rights (Thomas S. O’Connor)
    • Government and Market Mechanisms to Provide Alternatives to Scrap Tire Disposal (Nancy J. Merritt, William H. Redmond , and Michael M. Pearson)
    • The Comparative Influence of Government Funding by the U.S. Commerce Department’s Advanced Technology Program and Private Funding on the Marketing Strategies of High-Tech Firms (Conway L. Lackman)
    • Food Product Development, Food Regulations and Policies—Compatible or Not? (Alicea A. Glueck-Chaloupka, Louis M. Capella, and Patti C. Coggins)
    • New Technology Adoption, Business Strategy and Government Involvement: The Case of Mobile Commerce (Michael Stoica , Darryl W. Miller, and David Stotlar)
    • Predicting Core Innovation and Wealth from Technological Innovation and Domestic Competitiveness: The Crucial Role of Anti-Trust Policy Effectiveness (Renée J. Fontenot and Paul G. Wilhelm)
    • Incorporating the Dominant Social Paradigm into Government Technology Transfer Programs (William E. Kilbourne)
    • Governmental and Corporate Role in Diffusing Development Technologies: Ethical Macromarketing Imperatives (Oswald A. J. Mascarenhas, Ram Kesavan, and Michael D. Bernacchi)
    • Reflections on Ethical Concerns in Technology Transfer and Macromarketing (Nicholas Capaldi)
    • Response to Dr. Capaldi (William E. Kilbourne)
    • Progressive Reduction of Economic Inequality as a Macromarketing Task: A Rejoinder (Oswald A. J. Mascarenhas, Ram Kesavan, and Michael D. Bernacchi)
    • Index
    • Reference Notes Included

    Biography

    Kimball Marshall, William Piper