Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-thh2z Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-25T14:13:20.120Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The EC's Technology Policy as an Engine for Integration*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2014

Extract

‘EUROPESSIMISM’, SAID THE ECONOMIST IN 1984, ‘IS A FASHION that comes and goes’. The newspaper added that ‘The idea of a technology gap, with an uncompetitive Europe on the wrong side of it, deserves a very cold eye’. But it still covered its bets with the view that, despite reservations, ‘few doubt that Europe is in real trouble’. Europe experienced a previous peak of alarm about a ‘technology gap’ in the late 1960s. Concern then focused only on the United States was epitomized by Jean-Jacques Salomon's Le Défi Américain of 1967, and spawned a large literature. This petered out in the early 1970s as the United States experienced its own crises over Vietnam and Watergate, and by the end of the decade and the Carter presidency some Americans were becoming seriously worried about their own technological standing. One now had books with such titles as America's Technology Slip and The European Revenge: How the American Challenge was Rebuffed. However, by 1984 in a chapter entitled ‘“Europeanizing” the US Economy: The Enduring Appeal of the Corporatist State’ Melvyn Krauss was able to be far more sceptical: in his words ‘. . . the call for a new industrial policy in the US amounts to a call to catch up with the losers’. The Chairman of the European Committee for Research and Development had warned even in 1979 that while certain favourable factors guaranteed Europe's ‘survival, and perhaps even relatively comfortable existence’, this would be only ‘for a period that is difficult to predict but is probably no more than a few decades’.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Government and Opposition Ltd 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 ’Europe’s Technology Gap’, The Economist, 24 November 1984, pp. 99–110.

2 Salomon, Jean–Jacques, Le Défi Américain, London, Hamish Hamilton, 1968.Google Scholar

3 Ramo, Simon, America’s Technology Slip, New York, John Wiley, 1980.Google Scholar

4 , Heller and Willatt, Norris Robert, The European Revenge: How the American Challenge was Rebuffed, London, Barrie and Jenkins, 1975.Google Scholar

5 In Johnson, Chalmers (ed.), The Industrial Policy Debate, San Francisco, Institute for Contemporary Studies, 1984, p. 88.Google Scholar

6 Danzin, A., Science and the Second Renaissance of Europe, Oxford, Pergamon Press for the EEC, 1979, p. 122.Google Scholar

7 Strange, Susan, ‘The Persistent Myth of Lost Hegemony’, International Organisation, 41, 4, Autumn 1987, pp. 551–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

8 Frank Press, ‘Technological Competition and the Western Alliance’, in Pierre, Andrew J. (ed.), A High Technology Gap?, New York, New York University Press, 1987, pp. 35–37.Google Scholar

9 Marcum, John, ‘Changing Patterns of Technological Leadership’, McBrierty, Vincent J. (ed.), Europe-Japan, London, Butterworths, 1986, pp. 90–94.Google Scholar

10 Woods, Stanley, Western Europe: Technology and the Future, London, Croom Helm, 1987, Atlantic paper No. 63.Google Scholar

11 See also Patel, Pari and Pavitt, Keith, Measuring Europe’s Technological Performance: Results and Prospects, SPRU, 1985.Google Scholar

12 Research Funding as an Investment: Can We Measure the Returns?, Washington DC, US Congress, Office of Technology Assessment, OTA-TM-SET-36, April 1986.

13 See Williams, Roger, European Technology: The Politics of Collaboration, London, Croom Helm, 1972.Google Scholar

14 Hayward, Keith, ‘Airbus: Twenty Years of European Collaboration’, International Affairs, 64, 1, Winter 1987/1988, pp. 25–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

15 Sharp, Margaret and Shearman, Claire, European Technological Collaboration, Chatham House Papers No 36, London, Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1987.Google Scholar

16 Dodsworth, Terry, ‘European High Technology’, Financial Times, 13 04 1988.Google Scholar

17 Mytelka, Lynn Kreiger and Delapierre, Michel, ‘The Alliance Strategies of European Firms and the role of ESPRIT’, Journal of Common Market Studies, XXVI, 2, 12 1987, pp. 231, 251.Google Scholar

18 Christy, C. V. and Ironside, R. G., ‘Promoting “High Technology” Industry: Location Factors and Public Policy’, in Chapman, Keith and Humphrys, Graham (eds), Technical Change and Industrial Policy, Oxford, Basil Blackwell, 1987, Chapter 12.Google Scholar

19 Turninga, E. J., ‘Technology Assessment in Europe’, Futures, 20, 1, 02 1988, pp.Google Scholar37—45. See also articles by Vincent J. McBrierly and Ruud Smits and Jov Leyten in that issue.

20 Kennedy, Paul, The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers: Economic Change and Military Conflict 1500–2000, London, Unwin Hyman, 1988.Google Scholar