Many warn that the next stage of globalization--the offshoring of
research and development to China and India--threatens the foundations
of Western prosperity. But in The Venturesome Economy, acclaimed
business and economics scholar Amar Bhidé shows how wrong the doomsayers
are.
Using extensive field studies on venture-capital-backed businesses to
examine how technology really advances in modern economies, Bhidé
explains why know-how developed abroad enhances--not
diminishes--prosperity at home, and why trying to maintain the U.S. lead
by subsidizing more research or training more scientists will do more
harm than good.
When breakthrough ideas have no borders, a nation's capacity to exploit
cutting-edge research regardless of where it originates is crucial:
"venturesome consumption"--the willingness and ability of businesses and
consumers to effectively use products and technologies derived from
scientific research--is far more important than having a share of such
research. In fact, a venturesome economy benefits from an increase in
research produced abroad: the success of Apple's iPod, for instance,
owes much to technologies developed in Asia and Europe.
Many players--entrepreneurs, managers, financiers, salespersons,
consumers, and not just a few brilliant scientists and engineers--have
kept the United States at the forefront of the innovation game. As long
as their venturesome spirit remains alive and well, advances abroad need
not be feared. Read The Venturesome Economy and learn why--and see how
we can keep it that way.