Economic Development, Education and Transnational Corporations

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A01=Mark Hanson
asian
Author_Mark Hanson
Category=GTP
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comparative education
developing economies research
Development Curve
Development Triangle
Duplicative Imitations
educational systems impact on economic growth
Employee Unions
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_non-fiction
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Flying Goose Formation
foreign
Foreign TNCs
Fundamental Research
industrialisation policy
industry
institutional reform
International Bank
knowledge
Knowledge Acquisition
knowledge transfer
korea
Korea's Gdp
Korea’s Gdp
Labor Intensive Technology
LDC Government
Low Cost Labor Locations
manufacturing
manufacturing innovation
maquiladora
Maquiladora Industry
Mexican Personnel
Mexico's Gdp
Mexico’s Gdp
Multi National Corporations
National Innovation System
NDP
OECD Economic Survey
south
Tertiary Education
tigers
tncs
United Parcel Service
UT System
Va Te

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415668279
  • Weight: 360g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 May 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book focuses on the questions of: why do some economically disadvantaged nations develop significantly faster than others, and what roles do their educational systems play?

In the early 1960s Mexico and South Korea were both equally underdeveloped agrarian societies. Since that time, the development strategies pursued by each country resulted in dramatically different results. By the turn of the century South Korea possessed one of the finest educational systems in the world and was a world-class producer of high-tech products. Mexico, on the other hand, was still graduating less than half of its secondary school-age students and bogged down in assembling products owned by others. This book addresses the issues of what happened and why, and frames the consequences for other developing nations facing similar challenges.

Professor Hanson argues that the key to understanding involves the manner and intensity in which these countries engaged their educational, governmental and business institutions to acquire manufacturing knowledge from offshored transnational corporations, and how they used these insights to grow their own local industries. Whereas South Korea studied the foreign outsourced plants as if they were educational systems and pursued with tenacity the new knowledge they possessed, Mexico viewed them as ‘cash cows’ that generated wages and reduced unemployment. The author emphasizes that significant educational reform will only break down the barriers of institutional bureaucracies when responding to the pressures and demands of industrialization. This is one of the first books of its kind to compare South-East Asian and Latin American economies and their links to educational systems.

E. Mark Hanson is Professor of Education and Management at the University of California, Riverside, USA.

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