Exploring the Impact of Government Regulation on Technological Transitions; a Historical Perspective on Innovation in the Dutch Network-Based Industries
Government interventions can affect processes of technological transition through the enactment of legal and other policy instruments. In this contribution, we concentrated on legal interventions only and examined what they were, the relation between the public and private players that they affected...
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doaj-63364cd38a074c899303bc2f2d14152c2020-11-25T03:54:24ZengMDPI AGLaws2075-471X2020-04-019111110.3390/laws9020011Exploring the Impact of Government Regulation on Technological Transitions; a Historical Perspective on Innovation in the Dutch Network-Based IndustriesHelen Stout0Martin de Jong1Erasmus School of Law, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Burgemeester Oudlaan 50, 3062 PA Rotterdam, The NetherlandsErasmus School of Law, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Burgemeester Oudlaan 50, 3062 PA Rotterdam, The NetherlandsGovernment interventions can affect processes of technological transition through the enactment of legal and other policy instruments. In this contribution, we concentrated on legal interventions only and examined what they were, the relation between the public and private players that they affected, and the nature of the incentive they provided. We did this for four historical cases in the world of utility industries in the Netherlands in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The summarizing results for each case appeared in overview tables which eventually showed whether most of the administered stimuli were negative, neutral, or positive for the action alternatives of the innovating players, and thus the further development of the newly emerging technology. It is hard to escape the conclusion that the common argument and rhetoric that governments normally aim to propel industrial progress by opening a variety of options for innovating private players rings hollow when analyzed more systematically. A higher number of the incentives we found across the four cases were negative rather than positive, while some cases had only negative incentives and none had more positive than negative incentives.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/9/2/11network-based industriestechnological transitionslegal incentivesqualitative game theorybehavioral tacticsinnovators |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Helen Stout Martin de Jong |
spellingShingle |
Helen Stout Martin de Jong Exploring the Impact of Government Regulation on Technological Transitions; a Historical Perspective on Innovation in the Dutch Network-Based Industries Laws network-based industries technological transitions legal incentives qualitative game theory behavioral tactics innovators |
author_facet |
Helen Stout Martin de Jong |
author_sort |
Helen Stout |
title |
Exploring the Impact of Government Regulation on Technological Transitions; a Historical Perspective on Innovation in the Dutch Network-Based Industries |
title_short |
Exploring the Impact of Government Regulation on Technological Transitions; a Historical Perspective on Innovation in the Dutch Network-Based Industries |
title_full |
Exploring the Impact of Government Regulation on Technological Transitions; a Historical Perspective on Innovation in the Dutch Network-Based Industries |
title_fullStr |
Exploring the Impact of Government Regulation on Technological Transitions; a Historical Perspective on Innovation in the Dutch Network-Based Industries |
title_full_unstemmed |
Exploring the Impact of Government Regulation on Technological Transitions; a Historical Perspective on Innovation in the Dutch Network-Based Industries |
title_sort |
exploring the impact of government regulation on technological transitions; a historical perspective on innovation in the dutch network-based industries |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Laws |
issn |
2075-471X |
publishDate |
2020-04-01 |
description |
Government interventions can affect processes of technological transition through the enactment of legal and other policy instruments. In this contribution, we concentrated on legal interventions only and examined what they were, the relation between the public and private players that they affected, and the nature of the incentive they provided. We did this for four historical cases in the world of utility industries in the Netherlands in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The summarizing results for each case appeared in overview tables which eventually showed whether most of the administered stimuli were negative, neutral, or positive for the action alternatives of the innovating players, and thus the further development of the newly emerging technology. It is hard to escape the conclusion that the common argument and rhetoric that governments normally aim to propel industrial progress by opening a variety of options for innovating private players rings hollow when analyzed more systematically. A higher number of the incentives we found across the four cases were negative rather than positive, while some cases had only negative incentives and none had more positive than negative incentives. |
topic |
network-based industries technological transitions legal incentives qualitative game theory behavioral tactics innovators |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2075-471X/9/2/11 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT helenstout exploringtheimpactofgovernmentregulationontechnologicaltransitionsahistoricalperspectiveoninnovationinthedutchnetworkbasedindustries AT martindejong exploringtheimpactofgovernmentregulationontechnologicaltransitionsahistoricalperspectiveoninnovationinthedutchnetworkbasedindustries |
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