China’s 15-year plan for scientific and technological development – a critical assessment
(2007) In Asia Policy p.135-164- Abstract
- The latest long-term plan for science and technology reflects China’s determination both to overcome growing domestic social and environmental problems through technology and to become a world leader in innovation. This latest fifteen-year plan presents no radical departure from earlier strategies and continues to define policymaking by Beijing’s strong belief that innovation can be “decreed” top-down or steered by the government. The plan relies heavily both on supply-side policies for research and education and on a technology-driven view of innovation, rather than tackling less tangible and more complex issues such as deficits in social capital, institution-building, and building an innovation-friendly environment. New features in the... (More)
- The latest long-term plan for science and technology reflects China’s determination both to overcome growing domestic social and environmental problems through technology and to become a world leader in innovation. This latest fifteen-year plan presents no radical departure from earlier strategies and continues to define policymaking by Beijing’s strong belief that innovation can be “decreed” top-down or steered by the government. The plan relies heavily both on supply-side policies for research and education and on a technology-driven view of innovation, rather than tackling less tangible and more complex issues such as deficits in social capital, institution-building, and building an innovation-friendly environment. New features in the plan include a clear emphasis on energy, environment, and water resources. New targets in the plan to strengthen “independent” or “indigenous” innovation raise concerns abroad over the emergence of “techno-nationalism” and implications for China’s future economic openness. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/1386479
- author
- Schwaag-Serger, Sylvia LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2007
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- China, Science and Technology Policy, innovation
- in
- Asia Policy
- issue
- 4
- pages
- 135 - 164
- publisher
- National Bureau of Asian Research
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- b1c9fdbd-b641-475a-90de-136b6a8ddf29 (old id 1386479)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-04 10:58:04
- date last changed
- 2025-04-04 15:03:37
@article{b1c9fdbd-b641-475a-90de-136b6a8ddf29,
abstract = {{The latest long-term plan for science and technology reflects China’s determination both to overcome growing domestic social and environmental problems through technology and to become a world leader in innovation. This latest fifteen-year plan presents no radical departure from earlier strategies and continues to define policymaking by Beijing’s strong belief that innovation can be “decreed” top-down or steered by the government. The plan relies heavily both on supply-side policies for research and education and on a technology-driven view of innovation, rather than tackling less tangible and more complex issues such as deficits in social capital, institution-building, and building an innovation-friendly environment. New features in the plan include a clear emphasis on energy, environment, and water resources. New targets in the plan to strengthen “independent” or “indigenous” innovation raise concerns abroad over the emergence of “techno-nationalism” and implications for China’s future economic openness.}},
author = {{Schwaag-Serger, Sylvia}},
keywords = {{China; Science and Technology Policy; innovation}},
language = {{eng}},
number = {{4}},
pages = {{135--164}},
publisher = {{National Bureau of Asian Research}},
series = {{Asia Policy}},
title = {{China’s 15-year plan for scientific and technological development – a critical assessment}},
url = {{https://lup.lub.lu.se/search/files/5663330/1388869.pdf}},
year = {{2007}},
}