Building high-tech clusters : Silicon Valley and beyond
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Building high-tech clusters : Silicon Valley and beyond
Cambridge University Press, 2004
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book was first published in 2004. National economic growth is fueled by the development of high technology clusters such as Silicon Valley. The contributors examine the founding of ten clusters that have been successful at an early stage of growth in information technology. Their key finding is that the economics of starting a cluster is very different from the positive feedback loop that sustains an established cluster. While 'nothing succeeds like success' in an established cluster, far more difficult, risky and unlikely are the initial conditions that give rise to successful clusters. The contributors find regularities in the start of the successful clusters studied, including Silicon Valley around 1964. These cases contain 'old economy' factors such as competencies, firm building capabilities, managerial skills, and connection to markets, more than the flamboyant 'new economy' factors that have been highlighted in prevailing years.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- List of contributors
- 1. Introduction Timothy Bresnahan and Alfonso Gambardella
- 2. Learning the Silicon Valley way Gordon Moore and Kevin Davis
- 3. Israel's Silicon Wadi: the forces behind cluster formation Catherine de Fontenay and Erran Carmel
- 4. In the footsteps of Silicon Valley? Indian and Irish software in the international division of labor Ashish Arora, Alfonso Gambardella and Salvatore Torrisi
- 5. Agglomeration and growth: a study of the Cambridge hi-tech cluster Suma Athreye
- 6. Clusters, competition, and 'global players' in ICT markets: the case of Scandinavia John E. Richards
- 7. Taiwan's Hsinchu region: imitator and partner for Silicon Valley AnnaLee Saxenian
- 8. The role of government in regional technology development: the effects of public venture capital and science parks Scott Wallsten
- 9. Imitating Silicon Valley: regional comparisons of innovation activity based on venture capital flows Michael Horvath
- 10. Old economy inputs for new-economy outcomes: what have we learned? Timothy Bresnahan and Alfonso Gambardella
- Index.
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