Technology and Knowledge: a Basic View

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Technology and Knowledge: a Basic View TIK, UiO 2016 Bart Verspagen UNU-MERIT, Maastricht verspagen@merit.unu.edu

1. Technology and knowledge: A basic economic view Concepts of technological change paradigms causation and the chain linked model A very basic framework: incentives What is special about technology and why does it deserve our attention? Public good features Risk and uncertainty

Concepts (Schumpeter) Invention Innovation Diffusion Incremental - Radical

Major innovations (or basic innovations)

Incremental innovation

Unifying concepts Paradigms and trajectories Chain-linked model

Technological paradigms and trajectories Analogy to Kuhn s philosophy of science Paradigm: model and pattern of solution of selected technological problems, based on selected principles from the natural science and on selected material technologies (Dosi) Trajectory: normal technological change along a paradigm, closely associated to a goal for technological development that springs from a certain problem

Technological paradigms and trajectories breakthroughs and incremental innovations productivity change pervasive technological change (ICT) collective innovation Institutional context (techno-economic paradigm, Carlota Perez) Complex interaction between breakthrough S&T, incremental innovation, economic motives and institutional context: causality?

Causation? Demand pull or technology push Who initiates innovation projects: the R&D department or the marketing department? Is innovation a reaction to user demand, or does it create demand? Technology push linear model from technology to market Demand pull linear model from market to technology

The laser Charles Townes on the laser: Bell s patent department at first refused to patent the our amplifier or oscillator for optical frequencies because, it was explained, optical waves had never been of any importance to communication and hence the invention had little bearing on Bell System interests

Technology push Example: laser invented without direct application, now applied in a wide range (telecom, medical, music, science) R&D split into basic, applied and development specialization pattern of institutions carrying out R&D implications: large firms have an advantage because science takes resources

Horseshoes and How the West was won Jacob Schmookler found that the intensified use of horses when the West of the U.S. was colonized led to a great increase in the number of patents on horseshoes

Demand pull Innovation as a response to profit opportunities Jacob Schmookler patent data horseshoes statistical analysis of causality investment - patents critique: needs and demand

The chain linked model (Kline & Rosenberg)

Incentives Consider a minor process innovation Compare profits with and without innovation: the difference is what a firm would maximally pay to get the innovation (=maximum amount of R&D it is willing to spend)

Incentives mathematics Monopolist: Competitive firm: (which is larger) Social planner:

Incentives: conclusion The incentive for a monopolist is strictly smaller than that for a competitive firm with a minor innovation, which is again strictly smaller than that for a social planner

Steam engines An illustration Engine builders in Cornwall in 1800 could charge 1/3 rd of the total fuel savings relative to a Newcomen engine Fuel consumption: P=266 pence, HP=3250, H=4000 (Cornwall, 1800) Newcomen engine: C=24.3 Watt engine: C=6.1 Woolf engine: C=3.3 Trevithick engine: C=4.3

Special characteristics of technology Public goods aspects (IBM vs Apple): spillovers Risk and uncertainty (the Comet)

IBM vs Apple

IBM vs Apple

IBM vs Apple Market shares

IBM vs Apple Winners & losers?

Technology a public good? Recap: non-rivalry (or indivisibilities) non-excludability But: cumulativeness capability to learn Spillovers and investment (incentives)

The Comet airplane

Types of uncertainty Scientific Technological Commercial Systems

Strong uncertainty and weak uncertainty Neoclassical economic theory can cope well with weak uncertainty by using stochastic mathematics (Arrow) futures markets for all uncertain outcomes? Insurance against failures in innovation? moral hazard and agency problem (manager - stockholder and cost-plus contracts; trade-off between incentives and buying off uncertainty) large firms at an advantage because they undertake many projects (=insurance)

Strong uncertainty and weak uncertainty But still, uncertainty leads to underinvestment And, strong uncertainty (knowing or not knowing options?) systems and paradigms Evolutionary economic theory can cope well with strong uncertainty by using bounded rationality

Conclusion Incentive problem Theoretical problem (for neo-classical economics) bounded rationality, evolutionary economics full rationality, neoclassical economics confrontation or convergence?