Title :
Technology competition policies and the semiconductor industries of Japan and the United States: a fifty-year retrospective
Author :
Lynn, Leonard H.
Author_Institution :
Weatherhead Sch. of Manage., Case Western Reserve Univ., Cleveland, OH, USA
fDate :
5/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The dramatic changes in the fates of firms and industries involved in the production of semiconductors in the United States and Japan over the past half century have led to a large literature addressing or at least posing a number of questions. Did technology import policies, protectionism, support of research consortia, and the use of other industrial policies help or hurt the development of the Japanese industry? What were the consequences of the apparent technological discontinuities represented by the replacement of vacuum tubes by transistors, of germanium transistors by silicon transistors, of discrete transistors by integrated circuits? Have differences in industrial structure between the United States and Japan had consequences for competitiveness? This paper reviews this literature, and applies hindsight in revisiting these questions
Keywords :
electronics industry; government policies; management; Japan; Japanese semiconductor industry; US semiconductor industry; United States; discrete transistors; germanium transistors; industrial policies; integrated circuits; protectionism; research consortia support; silicon transistors; technological discontinuities; technology competition policies; technology import policies; transistors; vacuum tubes; Consumer electronics; Electronics industry; Germanium; Government; History; Integrated circuit technology; Production; Protection; Silicon; Transistors;
Journal_Title :
Engineering Management, IEEE Transactions on