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Technological Innovations and Sectoral Change. Ulrich Dolata University of Bremen and Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne. Announcement I. Announcement II. Ulrich Dolata Technik und sektoraler Wandel Technologische Eingriffstiefe, sektorale Adaptionsfähigkeit
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Technological Innovations and Sectoral Change Ulrich Dolata University of Bremen and Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne
Announcement II Ulrich Dolata Technik und sektoraler Wandel Technologische Eingriffstiefe, sektorale Adaptionsfähigkeit und soziotechnische Transformationsmuster MPIfG discussion paper 07/3, February 2007
Starting Point Three interrelated concepts: • Transformative Capacity of new Technologies (sektorale Eingriffstiefe neuer Technologien) • Sectoral Adaptability (sektorale Adaptionsfähigkeit) • Gradual Transformations (graduelle Transformationen)
Sectoral Systems 3 Elements • Technological Profile • Socio-economic Structures & Institutions • Typical Constellations of Actors and Patterns of Interaction 2 major types of sectoral systems • Sectors characterized by a high degree of innovative activities (= sectoral innovation systems) • Sectors characterized by the use of technologies
Sectoral Systems Elements technological socio-economic actors and patterns profile structures of interaction and institutions frame & guide constitute reproduce, (re-)inter- pret & transform sectoral patterns of regulation
Transformative Capacity of New Technologies • New technologies as relevant influencing factors on sectoral change • Technology-driven pressure to transform and adjust existing architectures of a sectoral system Transformative Capacity of new Technologies: • Direct and far-reaching pressure to change e.g. Biotechnology – Pharmaceutical Industry; Internet – Music-/Media Industries = high transformative capacity • Supplemental and sustaining impacts e.g. Internet – Automobile Industry = low transformative capacity
Transformative Capacity – qualitative Criteria Repercussions of new technological opportunities on • Technological profile & knowledge base • Patterns of research, production and distribution • Constellations and strategies of actors involved • Patterns of cooperation and competition • Institutional frameworks
Sectoral Adaptability • Degree of opennes of the established structures and institutions for path-deviant developments • Capability of the actors involved at anticipating, adopting and integrating new technologies Sectoral Adaptability: • Low adaptability = Persistence / path-dependent lock-ins e.g. Biotechnology – German Pharmaceutical Industry; Internet – Musik Industry • high adaptability = institutionalized mechanisms of adaptation facilitating path-deviant transformations e.g. Internet – Automobile Industry; Biotechnology – U.S. Pharmaceutical Industry
Institutionalized mechanisms of adaptation • High intensity of competition • Co-existence of different types of firms • Strong patterns of collaboration between firms / between industry and academia • Institutionalized niches for new cutting-edge actors • Technology and innovation policy
Gradual Transformations Characteristic of technology-driven sectoral change: Not: • abrupt breaks and radical shifts • decline, breakdown or radical exchange of existing organizations, structures and institutions But: • longer periods of discontinuity and mismatch • cumulation of a multiplicity of gradual adjustments that add-up to substantial change
Technology-driven sectoral change characterized by transformative capacity sectoral adaptability of new technologies of structures, institutions and actors unfolds constitutes pressure to change meets patterns of adaptation and absorption of technology-driven pressure Interplay leads to distinct Modes of sectoral transformation poles reactive and crisis-ridden anticipative and proactive Gradual Transformations gradual organizational, structural and institutional Change
Socio-economic structures • Types of firms • Patterns of research, production and distribution • Patterns of competition and cooperation • Degree of concentration
Institutions • regulative • normative • cultural-cognitive Rules of the game (Douglass C. North)