Policy, Regulation and Innovation in China''s Electricity and Telecom Industries
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
The scale of China's innovation ambitions inspires worldwide commentary, much of it poorly informed. Focusing on electricity, telecommunication and semiconductors, this book offers a richly detailed account of China's innovation efforts. Massive application of human, policy and financial resources shows great promise, but institutional obstacles, conflicting objectives, ill-advised policies and Soviet-era legacies inject inefficiencies, resulting in a complex mosaic of success and failure in both technical and commercial dimensions. State Grid leads the world in high-voltage power transmission, while domestic semiconductors lag behind the international frontier. Electricity and telecom providers record impressive technical advances, but overinvestment and inefficient operation contribute to high costs and prices. Nuclear power combines technical excellence with commercial weakness. Cost reduction rather than new technology underpins commercial success in solar materials. The book's granular studies look beyond specific technologies to incorporate the policy matrix, regulatory structures and global developments into the appraisal of China's innovation achievements.
See more
Current price
€41.39
Original price
€45.99
Save 10%
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Product Details
Weight: 760g
Dimensions: 153 x 228mm
Publication Date: 30 May 2019
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781108703697
About
Loren Brandt is the Noranda Chair Professor of Economics and International Trade at the University of Toronto. With Thomas G. Rawski he was co-editor and a major contributor to China's Great Economic Transformation (Cambridge 2008). His current research focuses on issues of industrial upgrading in China inequality dynamics and China's long-run economic growth and structural change. Thomas G. Rawski is emeritus Professor of Economics and History at the University of Pittsburgh. Recent publications include Tales from the Development Frontier (2013) which he co-authored. With Loren Brandt he was co-editor and a major contributor to China's Great Economic Transformation (Cambridge 2008). His research focuses on the development and modern history of China's economy including studies of China's reform mechanism and achievements.