Article Details
Retrieved on: 2024-04-01 21:51:31
Tags for this article:
Click the tags to see associated articles and topics
Summary
The article critiques the view that the number of technological achievements, like patents or base stations, directly equates to national power. It suggests that the U.S.' decentralized, innovative market and commercialization of research (despite competition and emerging technologies like 5G) are true indicators of its economic strength, in contrast to China's approach, which focuses on central control over innovation. The discussion is relevant to themes of design, product management, and innovation economics.
Article found on: www.csis.org
This article is found inside other Hiswai user's workspaces. To start your own collection, sign up for free.
Sign UpAlready have an account? Log in here