Author: John Russel Baldwin
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 100
Book Description
Innovation Dans Les Entreprises de Fabrication Canadiennes
Author: John Russel Baldwin
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 100
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 100
Book Description
Caractéristiques Déterminantes Des Jeunes Entreprises Des Industries Scientifiques
Author: John Russel Baldwin
Publisher: Micromedia
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 148
Book Description
New firms are seen to play a key role in the innovation process, especially in certain key sectors of the economy. This study therefore examines the differences in the profiles of successful new firms in science-based industries and other industries. The firms that are examined are entrants who survey into their early teen years. The study examines numerous factors that are seen to influence the sucess of new businesses. These include the competitive environment, business strategies and the financial structure of the businesses. Successful new firms in science-based industries are found to differ in a number of dimensions from new firms in other industries. They are likely to be exporters. They face greater technological change and intense competition with regards to the rate at which new products are being introduced. They tend to put more emphasis on quality, the frequent introduction of new products and the customization of products. They make greater use of information technology. They place more stress on new technology development, research and development facilities and the use of intellectual property. They are much more likely to innovate and they place more importance on recruiting skilled labour and on training. Finally, they are more likely to use non-traditional financial measures to evaluate performance and they are less likely to rely on secured credit for financing both their research and development activity and their machinery and equipment than are firms in other sectors.
Publisher: Micromedia
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 148
Book Description
New firms are seen to play a key role in the innovation process, especially in certain key sectors of the economy. This study therefore examines the differences in the profiles of successful new firms in science-based industries and other industries. The firms that are examined are entrants who survey into their early teen years. The study examines numerous factors that are seen to influence the sucess of new businesses. These include the competitive environment, business strategies and the financial structure of the businesses. Successful new firms in science-based industries are found to differ in a number of dimensions from new firms in other industries. They are likely to be exporters. They face greater technological change and intense competition with regards to the rate at which new products are being introduced. They tend to put more emphasis on quality, the frequent introduction of new products and the customization of products. They make greater use of information technology. They place more stress on new technology development, research and development facilities and the use of intellectual property. They are much more likely to innovate and they place more importance on recruiting skilled labour and on training. Finally, they are more likely to use non-traditional financial measures to evaluate performance and they are less likely to rely on secured credit for financing both their research and development activity and their machinery and equipment than are firms in other sectors.
Textile
Employment Performance in the Knowledge-based Economy
Author: Surendra Gera
Publisher: Industrie Canada
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 252
Book Description
There is a growing consensus among academics and policy-makers that most industrialized economies are increasingly becoming "knowledge-based." Knowledge, both as an input and an output, is seen a key source of long-term growth and job creation. The study examines the relationship between structural change and the employment performance of the Canadian economy over the period 1971 to 1991, using Statistics Canada's input/output model. Though largely based on previous work by the OECD (1992), the study employs more timely data and a finer industrial disaggregation (111 industries as opposed to 33), and explores more closely the employment implications of the emergence of the knowledge- based economy.
Publisher: Industrie Canada
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : en
Pages : 252
Book Description
There is a growing consensus among academics and policy-makers that most industrialized economies are increasingly becoming "knowledge-based." Knowledge, both as an input and an output, is seen a key source of long-term growth and job creation. The study examines the relationship between structural change and the employment performance of the Canadian economy over the period 1971 to 1991, using Statistics Canada's input/output model. Though largely based on previous work by the OECD (1992), the study employs more timely data and a finer industrial disaggregation (111 industries as opposed to 33), and explores more closely the employment implications of the emergence of the knowledge- based economy.
Incentive and Development Programs for Canadian Industry
Author: Canada. Department of Industry, Trade and Commerce
Publisher: Ottawa, Canada : Department of Industry, Trade and Commerce : Information Canada
ISBN:
Category : Economic assistance, Domestic
Languages : en
Pages : 32
Book Description
Publisher: Ottawa, Canada : Department of Industry, Trade and Commerce : Information Canada
ISBN:
Category : Economic assistance, Domestic
Languages : en
Pages : 32
Book Description
Réaction Des Entreprises - L'innovation À L'ère de L'information
Author: Randall Morck
Publisher: Canadian Museum of Civilization/Musee Canadien Des Civilisations
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : fr
Pages : 160
Book Description
This paper examines the corporate response to the major forces driving economic change: the pace of innovation, the emerging global free market economy & the aging of Canada's population. In this environment, firms must enhance their ability to collect & process information so as to create innovations. The document looks at past visions of the future (history does not extrapolate from things past, basic principles of economics, human nature -- self-interest, social animals, conditioning, cognitive dissonance); the difference between fads or facts; a vision of the future corporate world; a primer on the Austrian school of economics (prosperity is built on innovations more than cheap capital or cheap labour, the competition in a capitalist economy is to innovate, the cost of continuous innovation, government's limited freedom of action, basic principles of public policy in an Austrian economy); information as a good with a price (the economics of information & innovation); public policy in an information economy (financing initiatives from small firms, industrial R & D policy, public sector R & D policy, fiscal policy, monetary policy, trade policy); corporation in the global information economy (corporate culture, corporate Canada & emerging markets, demography & the corporation, business-government partnerships); corporate careers in the global information economy (blue-collar employees & labour organizations, white-collar careers, workplace training).
Publisher: Canadian Museum of Civilization/Musee Canadien Des Civilisations
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : fr
Pages : 160
Book Description
This paper examines the corporate response to the major forces driving economic change: the pace of innovation, the emerging global free market economy & the aging of Canada's population. In this environment, firms must enhance their ability to collect & process information so as to create innovations. The document looks at past visions of the future (history does not extrapolate from things past, basic principles of economics, human nature -- self-interest, social animals, conditioning, cognitive dissonance); the difference between fads or facts; a vision of the future corporate world; a primer on the Austrian school of economics (prosperity is built on innovations more than cheap capital or cheap labour, the competition in a capitalist economy is to innovate, the cost of continuous innovation, government's limited freedom of action, basic principles of public policy in an Austrian economy); information as a good with a price (the economics of information & innovation); public policy in an information economy (financing initiatives from small firms, industrial R & D policy, public sector R & D policy, fiscal policy, monetary policy, trade policy); corporation in the global information economy (corporate culture, corporate Canada & emerging markets, demography & the corporation, business-government partnerships); corporate careers in the global information economy (blue-collar employees & labour organizations, white-collar careers, workplace training).
Indicateurs Des Services
Proceedings of ... Annual Meeting of the Canadian Industrial Relations Association
Author: Canadian Industrial Relations Association. Meeting
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Industrial relations
Languages : en
Pages : 340
Book Description
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Industrial relations
Languages : en
Pages : 340
Book Description
Innovation Dans Les Industries de Services Dynamiques
Author: Statistics Canada
Publisher: Micromedia
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : fr
Pages : 192
Book Description
Innovation is at the heart of economic growth and development. It is trough innovation that new products are brought to market, new production processes developed and organizational change realized. Given existing cross-industry variations in structure, competitiveness and maturity, it is reasonable to expect that firms in different industries will innovate for different reasons, in different ways and with different results. This report focuses on how the innovation activities of firms in three dynamic service industries are conditioned by their different environments. Through an understanding of what competitive pressures come into play and how these pressures affect the type of innovation that is performed, Innovation in dynamic service industries goes some ways in illustrating how innovation regimes differ substantially, and quite logically, from one industry to another. This is the fifth in the series of publications on innovation and technological change in Canada. One of the earlier studies investigated the type of innovation taking place in the manufacturing sector (Baldwin and Da pont, Innovation in Canadian manufacturing enterprises, Catalogue No. 88-513-XPB). Two others focused on advanced manufacturing technologies. The first (Baldwin and Sabourin, Technology adoption in Canadian manufacturing, Catalogue No. 88-512-XPB) outlined the intensity of use of these technologies. The second (Baldwin, Sabourin, and Rafiquzzaman, Benefits and problems associated with technology adoption, (Catalogue No. 88-514-XPE) investigated the determinants of adoption. Another study (Baldwin, Innovation and intellectual property, Catalogue No. 88-515-XPE) examined how innovative firms protect their intellectual property after they have innovated.
Publisher: Micromedia
ISBN:
Category : Business & Economics
Languages : fr
Pages : 192
Book Description
Innovation is at the heart of economic growth and development. It is trough innovation that new products are brought to market, new production processes developed and organizational change realized. Given existing cross-industry variations in structure, competitiveness and maturity, it is reasonable to expect that firms in different industries will innovate for different reasons, in different ways and with different results. This report focuses on how the innovation activities of firms in three dynamic service industries are conditioned by their different environments. Through an understanding of what competitive pressures come into play and how these pressures affect the type of innovation that is performed, Innovation in dynamic service industries goes some ways in illustrating how innovation regimes differ substantially, and quite logically, from one industry to another. This is the fifth in the series of publications on innovation and technological change in Canada. One of the earlier studies investigated the type of innovation taking place in the manufacturing sector (Baldwin and Da pont, Innovation in Canadian manufacturing enterprises, Catalogue No. 88-513-XPB). Two others focused on advanced manufacturing technologies. The first (Baldwin and Sabourin, Technology adoption in Canadian manufacturing, Catalogue No. 88-512-XPB) outlined the intensity of use of these technologies. The second (Baldwin, Sabourin, and Rafiquzzaman, Benefits and problems associated with technology adoption, (Catalogue No. 88-514-XPE) investigated the determinants of adoption. Another study (Baldwin, Innovation and intellectual property, Catalogue No. 88-515-XPE) examined how innovative firms protect their intellectual property after they have innovated.
A Sectoral Approach to Innovation
Author: Science Council of Canada
Publisher: Science Council of Canada
ISBN:
Category : Forest products industry
Languages : fr
Pages : 74
Book Description
The forest-products industries are Canada's largest industrial sector andaccount for one job in every seven. This statement is issued to stimulateaction toward an innovation strategy for the forest-product industriesbuilding on a background study of R & D and technological innovation in theseindustries and discussions with a number of industry leaders.
Publisher: Science Council of Canada
ISBN:
Category : Forest products industry
Languages : fr
Pages : 74
Book Description
The forest-products industries are Canada's largest industrial sector andaccount for one job in every seven. This statement is issued to stimulateaction toward an innovation strategy for the forest-product industriesbuilding on a background study of R & D and technological innovation in theseindustries and discussions with a number of industry leaders.