ISBN-13: 9780198283591 / Angielski / Twarda / 1992 / 336 str.
This book investigates the ways in which the characteristics of a developing country's domestic industrial sector – for example, oligopolistic markets, the position of foreign enterprises, and the acquisition of modern technologies – affect its chances of industrializing far enough to engage in substantial export trade.Particular attention is devoted to the real-world imperfections frequently overlooked by orthodox economists. Case studies are included of, for example, Brazilian civil aircraft, Korean semi-conductors, and the automobile industry in a number of developing countries.The volume contributes to a better appreciation of the actual problems and constraints of industrialization and growth in developing countries and points the way to useful further lines of research.
This study investigates the ways in which the characteristics of a developing country's domestic industrial sector - its oligopolistic technology - affects its chances of industrializing far enough to engage in substantial export trade and examines the problems and constraints of industrialization and growth in developing countries.