Cantner, Uwe.

Entrepreneurships, the New Economy and Public Policy : Schumpeterian Perspectives / edited by Uwe Cantner, Elias Dinopoulos, Robert F. Lanzillotti. - vI, 345 páginas, 59 ilustraciones recurso en línea.

Springer eBooks

Editorial -- Reflections on the Schumpeter I knew well -- Schumpeter, product innovation and public policy: the case of cigarettes -- Risk, variety and volatility: growth, innovation and stock prices in early industry evolution -- Social networks and industrial geography -- Growing Silicon Valley on a landscape: an agent-based approach to high-tech industrial clusters -- The theory of the firm and the markets for strategic acquisitions -- The growth of commercialization — facilitating organizations and practices: A Schumpeterian perspective -- On the macroeconomic effects of establishing tradability in weak property rights -- Capital in the new economy: A Schumpeterian perspective -- A comparative perspective on innovation and productivity in manufacturing and services -- Tracing empirical trails of Schumpeterian development -- Towards an evolutionary interpretation of aggregate labor market regularities -- An evolutionary model of international competition and growth -- Innovation and growth in Germany over the past 150 years -- Nonlinear dynamism of innovation and business cycles -- The dynamic effects of general purpose technologies on Schumpeterian growth.

This volume contains a collection of papers concerned with Schumpeterian perspectives on entrepreneurship, the New Economy and public policy. Those topics are firmly rooted in the more general discussion of technological change, industry evolution, industrial organization, public policy, and economic growth. These research branches have shown an increasing specialization during the last decades. A connecting principle nevertheless is the Schumpeterian approach on the one hand, but also the principles of evolutionary economics on the other hand. The various contributions of this volume demonstrate the high relevance and thought-provoking nature of Schumpeterian and Evolutionary Economics and its policy relevance.

9783540269946

10.1007/b138441 doi

HB71-74