Andergassen, Rainer ;
Nardini, Franco ;
Ricottilli, Massimo
(2003)
Innovation Waves, Self-organised Criticality
and Technological Convergence.
Bologna:
Dipartimento di Scienze economiche DSE,
p. 23.
DOI
10.6092/unibo/amsacta/4825.
In: Quaderni - Working Paper DSE
(469).
ISSN 2282-6483.
Full text disponibile come:
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the evolutionary process
of imitation and innovation as a process of searching in a given neighbourhood
of firms. Networks are the main source of information for firms
willing to actively search and upgrade and which define the reachable
neighbourhood whose width is strictly related to cognitive distance. We
have identified two major forms of information setting off innovative behaviour:
the first comes in the shape of random events which are exogenous,
at least in terms of the firms’ own search activity, while the second is
determined by searching for technological opportunities in other economic
sectors. It is this activity that generates the spreading of a new technological
paradigm and that makes for technological convergence. All firms are
a heterogeneous set of agents bounded by their competence, technological
specificity and, more generally, rationality. The spreading of information
through cognitive neighbourhoods allows firms to gradually acquire full
knowledge leading to innovation waves. Imitation follows innovation as
firms attempt to glean information on best practise techniques to join their
sector technological leaders. Whilst innovators are temporarily allowed to
reap quasi rents the imitative band wagon effect drives the profit rate
down to its normal level. Productivity growth lowers the prices of sectors
involved in the process of technological advance causing obsolescence and,
thus, creative destruction in a Schumpeterian sense.
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the evolutionary process
of imitation and innovation as a process of searching in a given neighbourhood
of firms. Networks are the main source of information for firms
willing to actively search and upgrade and which define the reachable
neighbourhood whose width is strictly related to cognitive distance. We
have identified two major forms of information setting off innovative behaviour:
the first comes in the shape of random events which are exogenous,
at least in terms of the firms’ own search activity, while the second is
determined by searching for technological opportunities in other economic
sectors. It is this activity that generates the spreading of a new technological
paradigm and that makes for technological convergence. All firms are
a heterogeneous set of agents bounded by their competence, technological
specificity and, more generally, rationality. The spreading of information
through cognitive neighbourhoods allows firms to gradually acquire full
knowledge leading to innovation waves. Imitation follows innovation as
firms attempt to glean information on best practise techniques to join their
sector technological leaders. Whilst innovators are temporarily allowed to
reap quasi rents the imitative band wagon effect drives the profit rate
down to its normal level. Productivity growth lowers the prices of sectors
involved in the process of technological advance causing obsolescence and,
thus, creative destruction in a Schumpeterian sense.
Tipologia del documento
Monografia
(Working paper)
Autori
Parole chiave
Technological change, Self-organized criticality, Innovation and diffusion, Innovation waves, Creative distruction.
Settori scientifico-disciplinari
ISSN
2282-6483
DOI
Data di deposito
10 Mar 2016 09:52
Ultima modifica
10 Mar 2016 09:52
URI
Altri metadati
Tipologia del documento
Monografia
(Working paper)
Autori
Parole chiave
Technological change, Self-organized criticality, Innovation and diffusion, Innovation waves, Creative distruction.
Settori scientifico-disciplinari
ISSN
2282-6483
DOI
Data di deposito
10 Mar 2016 09:52
Ultima modifica
10 Mar 2016 09:52
URI
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