Abstract

Explores how technological innovation has shaped and been shaped by science, industry, and economics in the twentieth century. Technological change and specific technologies have impacted productivity, the learning process, technology transfer and technology policies. Starting with a summary of historical literature on technical progress, the book goes on to discuss and promote Karl Marx's influential method of studying technology as the result of interrelated social processes -- especially emphasizing the mutual interaction between technology and the economy. Analysis of current empirical studies shows the need for an enlarged framework for understanding the relation between the economy and technical change. Technological interdependence in the American economy is analyzed, and later expanded to encompass international business. High-tech industries are discussed as particularly reliant upon scientific research. The commercial aircraft industry from 1925-75 is also examined, as an exemplary instance in which technological innovation and government support and regulation allowed for economic success. The book concludes that scientific progress is heavily influenced by technological considerations that are, in turn, shaped by industry and economics. Thus, decisions made in the private and public sectors should affect both supply and demand, favoring the creative, mutually advantageous connection between science and technology. (CJC)

Keywords

Black boxEconomicsNeoclassical economicsComputer scienceArtificial intelligence

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Publication Info

Year
1984
Type
article
Volume
51
Issue
1
Pages
296-296
Citations
1954
Access
Closed

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1954
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Cite This

Ulrich Kohli, Nathan Rosenberg (1984). Inside the Black Box: Technology and Economics. Southern Economic Journal , 51 (1) , 296-296. https://doi.org/10.2307/1058352

Identifiers

DOI
10.2307/1058352