Economics and National Strategy in the Information Age: Global Networks, Technology Policy, and Cooperative Competition
By (Author) James R. Golden
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th July 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political economy
International relations
Warfare and defence
Computing and Information Technology
330.973
Hardback
320
The Information Age has dawned at the same time the global political system is in transition. High technology performance and economic productivity are converging across the major developed regions of North America, East Asia, and Europe. If U.S. economic, military, and political leadership is to continue, it must depend more on flexible adaptation to the new technical and organizational realities and less on technological dominance. The heart of this adaptation lies in the evolution of a national technology policy that emphasizes market forces and the exploitation of network linkages within and among commercial and military organizations.
Upper-division undergraduate through professional.-Choice
"Upper-division undergraduate through professional."-Choice
JAMES R. GOLDEN, Colonel U.S. Army, served as a senior staff economist on the President's Council of Economic Advisers and presently is Professor and Head of the Department of Social Sciences at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point. His previous works include Economics of National Security (co-authored, 1983), NATO Burden Sharing (1983), and The Dynamics of Change in NATO (1984).