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Diffusion of innovations

About: Diffusion of innovations is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2139 publications have been published within this topic receiving 191397 citations. The topic is also known as: diffusion of innovation & diffusion of innovations theory.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In addition to the efficiency of resource use and the evaluation of whether the research expenditures constituted a socially profitable use of resources, economic and political forces leading to the generation of new technology are themselves related to and explained by matters of efficiency and equity.
Abstract: The generation of new technology has come to be viewed as an economic activity to which scarce resources can be devoted, and for which measurable output can be defined (Schultz 1970). Society, either individually or collectively, makes conscious investment decisions to allocate resources to research activities with the expectation that the present value of some future income streams resulting from the technological advances will exceed the cost of their generation. This leads naturally to the concept of efficiency of resource use and the evaluation of whether the research expenditures constituted a socially profitable use of resources. Griliches, Peterson, Ayer and Schuh, and Duncan provide well-documented examples of the analysis of the returns to investment in agricultural research. Evenson (1975, 1976, 1977) recently has extended these studies to encompass the returns to the international diffusion of innovations. In addition to the efficiency criterion, economists increasingly have focused attention on the distributional impact of technological change. Typically a comparative static Marshallian framework is used to estimate the gross social benefits accruing to producers and consumers (e.g., Akino and Hayami). This is accomplished by comparing the producer and consumer surplus with and without the technological change, which is captured by a displacement of the product supply curve. The procedures for measurement of the relevant areas, questioned by Scobie, have been clarified recently (Jarrett and Lindner, Lindner and Jarrett, Sarhangi et al.). Other researchers have considered the impact of innovation on functional income shares (Ayer and Schuh, Wallace and Hoover). More recently, Scobie and Posada (1977, 1978) examined the impact of research-induced benefits and costs on the distribution of household income at the national level. The increased attention to distributional impacts reflects an important step in the development of a more complete analysis of technological change, one in which the economic and political forces leading to the generation of new technology are themselves related to and explained by matters of efficiency and equity. In short, a conceptual framework is sought in which technological change becomes a truly "endogenous" element. Hayami and Ruttan have offered relative factor prices as an engine governing the force and direcion of technological change, and Ruttan (1973, p. 46) extends the "induced innovation perspective to include the process of institutional innovation" (see also Ruttan 1978). The demand for publicly financed research is explained by Guttman in terms of political interest groups, i.e., the beneficiaries of the research. De Janvry (1977) has developed an explicit model of generation of new technology in which he identifies the determinants of the supply of and demand for technological change, again harpening the focus on the sociopolitical interdependencies. While being a relatively complete statement of the dialectical process which generates technological and institutional change, enormous empirical challenges remain. De Janvry's attempt to construct a social payoff matrix for Chile or the work of Evenson (1977) in constructing measures of research output serve to caution the ambitious. However, economists must venture beyond the mechanical calculation of internal rates of return to

4 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that for successful IOIS adoption, industry IOIS project managers should jointly rely on traditional DOI factors, dense SC networks with numerous ties, and proactive industry institutions.

4 citations

Book Chapter
01 Jan 2012

4 citations

01 Jan 2016
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use the Group/Grid or Cultural Theory (CT) to distinguish four competing innovation systems narratives, each with their own theory of change, criterion variables, strategies, pathways of innovation and designs for innovation platforms.
Abstract: Innovation systems (IS) are taken to be coherent and consistent narratives or discourses. This chapter uses the Group/Grid or Cultural Theory (CT) to distinguish four competing IS narratives, each with their own theory of change, criterion variables, strategies, pathways of innovation and designs for innovation platforms (IP): 1. The business model of agronomy (BMA), based on the methodological individualism of the diffusion of innovations and ‘agricultural treadmill’ paradigms and focusing on technology development to raise yields. 2. Package and value chain approaches that seek to enable individual entrepreneurship through access to services, inputs, credit and markets and other institutions that reduce transaction costs. 3. Promotion of rules and regulations (hierarchical institutions) to constrain the pursuit of individual interests for some public goods (governance, control of corruption, sustainable use of natural resources). 4. Egalitarian approaches that seek to empower, emancipate, strengthen civil society and enhance social capital. This framework proves useful for analysing the history of agricultural development in Industrial countries and sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) to point to ways forward for inclusive approaches to mobilize the vast productive resources under smallholder management in Africa.

4 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202310
202236
202172
202078
201977
201898