Ouverture de ‘Global Networks and Local Development-2’

The global boundaries of innovation, creative imitation and imitation have significantly changed the relative position of many Nation-States and their competitive positions face to global networks and local firms’ development. Chinese production organisations, not casually, are actually involved in...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Silvio M. Brondoni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Niccolò Cusano University-Rome 2013-12-01
Series:Symphonya
Subjects:
Online Access:https://symphonya.unicusano.it/article/view/10296
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spelling doaj-bb2d5549486f4e2ba4a83640f4450a4a2021-05-13T07:45:52ZengNiccolò Cusano University-RomeSymphonya1593-03001593-03192013-12-010211810.4468/2013.2.01ouverture9583Ouverture de ‘Global Networks and Local Development-2’Silvio M. BrondoniThe global boundaries of innovation, creative imitation and imitation have significantly changed the relative position of many Nation-States and their competitive positions face to global networks and local firms’ development. Chinese production organisations, not casually, are actually involved in the global economic growth as a process of continuous technological innovation and industrial upgrading (creative imitation), with a massive engagement in the local development. Globalization shifted also India to become an important R&D hub in many industries. After years of self-imposed exclusion (for the long, post-colonial license orientation) India has gone beyond the limit of reverse engineering of products developed elsewhere (creative imitation) and has finally joined the global business of innovation and imitation. Finally, the growth model of Italian businesses abroad is consistent with the characteristics of Italian designer products and the country’s fragmented industrial structure, which are reflected in a ‘global gap’. Italian firms are therefore progressively oriented to confine their competitive policies to internal markets, with productions focused on imitation and creative imitation.https://symphonya.unicusano.it/article/view/10296global marketsglobal networksinnovationimitationcreative imitationlocal developmentchinese organisationsindian organisationsitalian smes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Silvio M. Brondoni
spellingShingle Silvio M. Brondoni
Ouverture de ‘Global Networks and Local Development-2’
Symphonya
global markets
global networks
innovation
imitation
creative imitation
local development
chinese organisations
indian organisations
italian smes
author_facet Silvio M. Brondoni
author_sort Silvio M. Brondoni
title Ouverture de ‘Global Networks and Local Development-2’
title_short Ouverture de ‘Global Networks and Local Development-2’
title_full Ouverture de ‘Global Networks and Local Development-2’
title_fullStr Ouverture de ‘Global Networks and Local Development-2’
title_full_unstemmed Ouverture de ‘Global Networks and Local Development-2’
title_sort ouverture de ‘global networks and local development-2’
publisher Niccolò Cusano University-Rome
series Symphonya
issn 1593-0300
1593-0319
publishDate 2013-12-01
description The global boundaries of innovation, creative imitation and imitation have significantly changed the relative position of many Nation-States and their competitive positions face to global networks and local firms’ development. Chinese production organisations, not casually, are actually involved in the global economic growth as a process of continuous technological innovation and industrial upgrading (creative imitation), with a massive engagement in the local development. Globalization shifted also India to become an important R&D hub in many industries. After years of self-imposed exclusion (for the long, post-colonial license orientation) India has gone beyond the limit of reverse engineering of products developed elsewhere (creative imitation) and has finally joined the global business of innovation and imitation. Finally, the growth model of Italian businesses abroad is consistent with the characteristics of Italian designer products and the country’s fragmented industrial structure, which are reflected in a ‘global gap’. Italian firms are therefore progressively oriented to confine their competitive policies to internal markets, with productions focused on imitation and creative imitation.
topic global markets
global networks
innovation
imitation
creative imitation
local development
chinese organisations
indian organisations
italian smes
url https://symphonya.unicusano.it/article/view/10296
work_keys_str_mv AT silviombrondoni ouverturedeglobalnetworksandlocaldevelopment2
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