6 research outputs found
Technology transfer : a case study
Like many developing countries, Thailand has adopted
industrialisation policies to achieve growth objectives.
At the same time direct foreign investment has been
encouraged to bring additions to the local stock of capital,
management and technology. From the early 1970s, there has
been growing disillusion about the benefits that a host
country can gain from direct foreign investment. Direct
foreign investment has been attacked as bringing
inappropriate technology, inhibiting local learning and
perpetuating technological dependence.
This thesis has taken Thai manufacturing industry as
a case study. The study argues that modern large-scale
manufacturing industries must be viewed as skills rather
than employment generators. Employment objectives could not
be achieved in any significant degree under the current
strategy regardless of channels for technology transfer. Part
I examines the role of direct foreign investment and other
channels for transferring technology to Thailand, the cost
of importing technology through direct foreign investment
and technology contracts, and the relative efficiency of
these channels in exploiting imported technology. Evidence
suggests that the weakness of local technical and industrial
expertise often makes direct foreign investment, especially
joint venture arrangements, the preferred form of
transferring technology although its cost in terms of
royalty payments is slightly higher. Local sectors turned
out to be relatively efficient in bargaining for technology.
Other invisible costs and factors which affect the pricing
of technology are also discussed.
The positive spill-over effects of direct foreign
investment, though they exist, are weak. This is partly
attributable to the early stage of industrialisation of
Thailand, the small size of Thai industries and the relative
inefficiency of direct foreign investment in some sectors. Like many developing countries, Thailand has adopted
industrialisation policies to achieve growth objectives.
At the same time direct foreign investment has been
encouraged to bring additions to the local stock of capital,
management and technology. From the early 1970s, there has
been growing disillusion about the benefits that a host
country can gain from direct foreign investment. Direct
foreign investment has been attacked as bringing
inappropriate technology, inhibiting local learning and
perpetuating technological dependence.
This thesis has taken Thai manufacturing industry as
a case study. The study argues that modern large-scale
manufacturing industries must be viewed as skills rather
than employment generators. Employment objectives could not
be achieved in any significant degree under the current
strategy regardless of channels for technology transfer. Part
I examines the role of direct foreign investment and other
channels for transferring technology to Thailand, the cost
of importing technology through direct foreign investment
and technology contracts, and the relative efficiency of
these channels in exploiting imported technology. Evidence
suggests that the weakness of local technical and industrial
expertise often makes direct foreign investment, especially
joint venture arrangements, the preferred form of
transferring technology although its cost in terms of
royalty payments is slightly higher. Local sectors turned
out to be relatively efficient in bargaining for technology.
Other invisible costs and factors which affect the pricing
of technology are also discussed.
The positive spill-over effects of direct foreign
investment, though they exist, are weak. This is partly
attributable to the early stage of industrialisation of
Thailand, the small size of Thai industries and the relative
inefficiency of direct foreign investment in some sectors.Like many developing countries, Thailand has adopted
industrialisation policies to achieve growth objectives.
At the same time direct foreign investment has been
encouraged to bring additions to the local stock of capital,
management and technology. From the early 1970s, there has
been growing disillusion about the benefits that a host
country can gain from direct foreign investment. Direct
foreign investment has been attacked as bringing
inappropriate technology, inhibiting local learning and
perpetuating technological dependence.
This thesis has taken Thai manufacturing industry as
a case study. The study argues that modern large-scale
manufacturing industries must be viewed as skills rather
than employment generators. Employment objectives could not
be achieved in any significant degree under the current
strategy regardless of channels for technology transfer. Part
I examines the role of direct foreign investment and other
channels for transferring technology to Thailand, the cost
of importing technology through direct foreign investment
and technology contracts, and the relative efficiency of
these channels in exploiting imported technology. Evidence
suggests that the weakness of local technical and industrial
expertise often makes direct foreign investment, especially
joint venture arrangements, the preferred form of
transferring technology although its cost in terms of
royalty payments is slightly higher. Local sectors turned
out to be relatively efficient in bargaining for technology.
Other invisible costs and factors which affect the pricing
of technology are also discussed.
The positive spill-over effects of direct foreign
investment, though they exist, are weak. This is partly
attributable to the early stage of industrialisation of
Thailand, the small size of Thai industries and the relative
inefficiency of direct foreign investment in some sectors. Part II of the thesis examines in some detail the
fostering of human capital and the choice of techniques in
the textile industry. On the production side, evidence
suggests that technology has largely been transferred.
However, at the entrepreneurial level, the transfer has been
inhibited by the desire (often of both local and foreign
parties) to maximise efficiency.
It also reveals that both foreign and local textile
firms are not significantly different in their choice of
technology. Their choice has largely been affected by local
factor prices which in turn are influenced by various local
policy instruments. The relatively high productivity and
profitability of foreign firms are attributable to their
management rather than their machines.
While the evidence does not suggest that direct foreign
investment per se has produced undesirable effects, more
could be achieved by the promotion of market mechanisms and
provision of information to local entrepreneurs
Fertility and family planning : a case study of Ngao district, Lampang, Thailand
Edited versionExplores the relationship between fertility and socioeconomic and demographic variables, as well as the determinants of the acceptance of family planning in rural Thailand. Includes a bibliography
Technology Transfer: A Case Study
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