Industrial Policy and Development in Africa
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Industrial Policy and Development in Africa" published on by Oxford University Press.
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In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"Industrial Policy and Development in Africa" published on by Oxford University Press.
In: Business in Britain in the Twentieth Century, S. 48-63
In: OECD Sustainable Development Studies; Measuring Sustainable Production, S. 19-21
In: Economic Liberalization and Integration in East Asia, S. 87-95
In: Contributions to Economics; The New Industrial Policy of the European Union, S. 227-239
In: Contributions to Economics; The New Industrial Policy of the European Union, S. 187-204
In: Contributions to Economics; The New Industrial Policy of the European Union, S. 173-186
In: Contributions to Economics; The New Industrial Policy of the European Union, S. 87-111
In: Contributions to Economics; The New Industrial Policy of the European Union, S. 3-38
In: Contributions to Economics; The New Industrial Policy of the European Union, S. 267-272
In: Contributions to Economics; Small Businesses in the Aftermath of the Crisis, S. 41-70
In: Advances in Spatial Science; Innovation, Growth and Competitiveness, S. 343-380
In: Strategies of Multinational Corporations and Social Regulations, S. 57-76
In: A German Digital Grand Strategy: Integrating Digital Technology, Economic Competitiveness, and National Security in Times of Geopolitical Change
As one of the world's most globalized economies, Germany is confronting a challenging international environment characterized by aggressive subsidies, a global race for control of key technologies such as advanced chips, and vulnerable supply chains for critical components. Increased energy costs - induced by Russia's war on Ukraine - are also straining Germany's industrial model. Germany's industrial economy is simultaneously undergoing a fundamental transformation from precision-based engineering to systems-based manufactured products. With this shift, a competitive digital technology stack is becoming a key repository for future industrial competitiveness. Yet, the country struggles to capture value in fast-growing markets like that for cloud and edge infrastructure. It also faces risks from its exposure to untrustworthy technology vendors and potential geopolitical disruptions to fragile hardware supply chains.
In: The new industrial policy of the European Union., S. 205-226