The Information Age has dawned at the same time the global political system is in transition. High technology performance and economic productivity are converging across the major developed regions of North America, East Asia, and Europe. If U.S. economic, military, and political leadership is to continue, it must depend more on flexible adaptation to the new technical and organizational realities and less on technological dominance. The heart of this adaptation lies in the evolution of a national technology policy that emphasizes market forces and the exploitation of network linkages within and among commercial and military organizations.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Figures
Tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
Convergence, Global Networks, and the Productivity Cycle
Economics and National Strategy: The New Relationships
Collapse or Convergence?
Global Networks
Economic Systems, Networks, and the Productivity Cycle
Toward a Strategy of Cooperative Competition
Global Networks, National Systems, and Strategic Policies
U. S. Technology Policy
Military Technology Policy
A National Strategy of Cooperative Competition
Selected Bibliography
Index