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Governance, Growth and Global Leadership: The Role of the State in Technological Progress, 1750–2000

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TLDR
In this article, the authors focus on the role of the state in promoting a country's long-term technological progress and industrial leadership and explore various factors that promote or hinder technological advancement and how these can in turn effect national development.
Abstract
This book focuses on the role of the state in promoting a country's long-term technological progress and industrial leadership. Throughout history, a nation's rise to dominance has invariably been followed by its fall; the dominant powers of today are not the same ones that controlled the world three hundred years ago. In the same manner, economic dominance has usually been fleeting, as leading nations have routinely been caught up and surpassed by challengers. This study looks at Schumpeterian growth - currently the most important source of economic growth - which credits the ability to use technological progress for the benefit of industrial leadership as the key motor of national development and economic success. Contrasting the experiences of five great powers (Britain, France, Germany, the USA and Japan) during five periods of technological and industrial leadership, from the Industrial Revolution to the beginning of the twenty-first century, the book draws on historical and comparative methods to draw causal inferences about international progress and leadership. It explores various factors that promote or hinder technological advancement and how these can in turn effect national development. It concludes that where states have forged ahead and maintained a lead over their rivals, it is because consensus and cohesion prevented vested interests from growing powerful enough to block structural economic change. By applying economic theory to long-term historical models, this book offers a fascinating perspective on the causes and effects of national growth and industrial leadership. It will be invaluable reading for anyone with an interest in international relations and global economic trends, both modern and historical.

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Institutional change in the Schumpeterian–Baumolian construct: power, contestability and evolving entrepreneurial interests

TL;DR: In this article, an extension of the Schumpeterian-Baumolian construct is proposed to argue that changing institutions is a contestable process: its outcome determined by the complex nexus of interests and power endowments of actors.
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Assessing the role of steam power in the first industrial revolution:The early work of Nick von Tunzelmann

TL;DR: This paper examined the impact of the Watt steam engine and its pirate copies on the British economy using the social savings method pioneered by R.W. Fogel, showing that the impact was smaller and later than many historians had supposed.
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The Economic Rise and Fall of the Great Powers: Technological and Industrial Leadership since the Industrial Revolution

Espen Moe
TL;DR: The authors compared five periods of industrial leadership, from the Industrial Revolution until today, to analyze why certain nations have been better able to rise to industrial leadership and stay there, than others.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fukushima fallout: Gauging the change in Japanese nuclear energy policy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe nuclear energy policy transformation in the aftermath of the Fukushim a disaster, and demonstrate that a vested interest perspective is important to understand the results of Japan's energy policy before Fukushima.