90 research outputs found
Innovation and Technology Policy: Lessons From Emission Control and Safety Technologies in the U.S. Automobile Industry
This research explores processes of innovative activities that lead to the development of automobile
emission-control and safety technologies in the U.S. automobile industry. Understanding the construction of
these two automotive technologies is interesting for two reasons: 1) they were developed under
command-and-control type government regulations designed to force the industry to develop new technologies
by setting standards beyond industryâs current technical capability (âTechnology-forcingâ regulations); and 2)
the two key federal agencies responsible for designing and implementing the two sets of regulations (the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the Environmental Protection Agency) were established in
the same period, the late 1960s, creating an ideal ânatural experimentâ for analyzing processes of technological
changes that involve development of two different technological systems under two different sets of federal laws
and federal agencies, and one common regulated industry -- the automobile industry. Our key motivation in
this research is to investigate whether âtechnology-forcingâ federal regulatory standards imposed upon the U.S.
automobile industry stimulated industry innovation; and more importantly, whether federal regulations
conferred any competitive advantage on the domestic U.S. firms in the automobile industry, which has long
been crowded by foreign automakers as well as foreign suppliers.
By using patent application as a measure of innovative activities, we identified relevant patents in both
automobile emission-control and safety technologies in the last forty years from c. 1960 to c. 2000. In addition
to compiling patent application records, we extensively studied both existing secondary literature and published
government and industry records and conducted targeted interviews with important actors across a variety of
related institutions involved in the development. This qualitative and quantitative information was used to
construct a historically based study on two simultaneously-developing automotive safety and emission-control
technologies, so that we could compare and contrast not only the patterns of innovation but also the
socio-political processes of technological development under regulatory pressures.
Statistical results reveal a strong correlation between overall patent applications and major regulatory events in
both automotive emission-control and safety technologies. This finding supports the idea that
âtechnology-forcingâ regulatory instruments can be effective in driving technological change. More importantly,
for a separate model that tested the impact of regulation on patent applications by U.S. firms (after controlling
for foreign patenting activities and firm market share), regulation was also found to be effective in driving
innovation, but its impact was significant only in the early phase of technological change when regulations were
first introduced in the early 1970s.
Findings of this research provide interesting new insights on the âPorter hypothesis,â which claims that
appropriately designed regulation will increase corporate competitiveness and motivate new process and product
innovation. While this study provides an empirical evidence for the Porter hypothesis; the study also implies
that the most significant impact of regulation on innovation and industrial competitiveness may only be
positive and significant in the early phase of technological change when the market for new technology is
immature and when more radical technological innovation is necessary to meet new, stringent regulations.
Interestingly, the study also shows that the auto industry reacted differently to the expectations of the regulatory
agencies; that is, the auto industry developed and introduced catalyst-based emission control systems in the
1970s as expected by the EPA. Yet the auto industry resisted implementing the airbag system for automobile
safety that NHTSA actively pushed for in the early 1970s
Linking Induced Technological Change, Competitiveness and Environmental Regulation: Evidence from Patenting in the U.S. Auto Industry
This article examines firmsâ innovation activities in response to U.S. technology-forcing auto emissions standards enacted
between 1970 and 1998. Patent applications in automobile emission control technologies were used as a measure of firmsâ
innovative responses to regulatory pressures. In addition, we extensively studied secondary literature and industry specific
records and conducted targeted interviews with experts involved in the development. Findings of this study provide new
evidence that supports the Porter hypothesis: the performance based technology-forcing auto emissions regulations induced
technological innovation and led domestic U.S. firms to become relatively more innovative when compared to their foreign
rivals. Overall, this study suggests that proper technology-forcing regulations have the potential to induce technological
innovation, in particular radical innovation. Findings also imply that domestic firms may establish competitive advantage
over rival firms by reacting proactively in the early phase of the regulatory era
In Search of a Trade Mark: Search Practices and Bureaucratic Poetics
Trade marks have been understood as quintessential âbureaucratic propertiesâ. This article suggests that the making of trade marks has been historically influenced by bureaucratic practices of search and classification, which in turn were affected by the possibilities and limits of spatial organisation and technological means of access and storage. It shows how the organisation of access and retrieval did not only condition the possibility of conceiving new trade marks, but also served to delineate their intangible proprietary boundaries. Thereby they framed the very meaning of a trade mark. By advancing a historical analysis that is sensitive to shifts, both in actual materiality and in the administrative routines of trade mark law, the article highlights the legal form of trade mark as inherently social and materially shaped. We propose a historical understanding of trade mark law that regards legal practice and bureaucratic routines as being co-constitutive of the very legal object itself
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Spinning Tales About Japanese Cotton Spinning: Saxonhouse (1974) Then and Now
We revisit the story of technology adoption and diffusion in the Meiji-era cotton spinning industry in Japan, the study of which was pioneered by Gary Saxonhouse in an article published in JEH exactly 40 years ago. Using a novel data set and modern methodology, we argue that both the ease with which the best technology was diffused and the role of âslavish imitationâ in this process may have been overstated. We find an important role played by market competition, including asset reallocation. Our analyses provide researchers with even richer insights into general questions of innovation, technology diffusion, and economic growth
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