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Acting as an innovation niche seeder:how can the reverse salient of southeast Asian economies be overcome?

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Innovation, Catch-up and Sustainable Development
  • The original version of this chapter was revised as the Copyright holder name, Copyright year information were incorrectly mentioned and as well as the footnote information was missed to be included to the chapter. A correction to this chapter can be found at https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-84931-3_17
  • Reprinted by permission from Springer Nature: Springer Nature, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, Acting as an innovation niche seeder:how can the reverse salient of southeast Asian economies be overcome?, Hsien-Chen Lo, Ching-Yan Wu & Mei-Chih Hu, 2020 (https://doi.org/10.1007/s00191-020-00685-5)

Abstract

Taking Southeast Asian emerging economies as an empirical case, this study explores how the reverse salients that have emerged during the transitional process may be overcome efficiently and effectively. In particular, three action-oriented case studies derived from a heuristic research approach are presented to show how Taiwan is empowering its universities and public research institutes to act as innovation niche seeders for Southeast Asian economies, thereby compensating for the weakness of their socio-technical systems (i.e. the reverse salients). Presently, the government-led policies of Southeast Asian countries are largely oriented towards incentivizing foreign multinational corporations to lead the development of domestic production networks. This strategy allows these countries to acquire the necessary resources for an economic transition in the era of digitalization, although at the expense of developing their own innovation niches. This study presents the urgency of a need for a new approach, and a new avenue for emerging countries to develop an effective and efficient governance model. The proposed model would allow external institutional mechanisms, such as universities and public research institutes, to act as critical intermediaries providing an alternative solution for the dilemmas faced by small and medium-sized enterprise-centric emerging countries. Policy implications for building sustainable socio-technical regimes in Southeast Asia’s transitional emerging countries are also discussed.

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Change history

  • 08 September 2022

    The book was inadvertently published with its Chapters 6, 7, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16 having an incorrect “Copyright Holder Name” and “Copyright Year” information. The reprinting information in the footnotes of these Spin-Off chapters were also missed to be included to these 7 chapters.

Notes

  1. 1.

    It was Hughes (1987) who first proposed the concept of a ‘reverse salient.’ In his book explaining the evolution of a large technological system, he refers to a ‘reverse salient’ as components in the system that have fallen behind, or out of phase with, the others. He further explains that a reverse salient impedes the evolution or hampers the achievement toward the final goal of the collective system. In this study, we follow Hughes’s metaphor for describing a reverse salient as a significant difficulty faced during system transition.

  2. 2.

    While there are some successful startups that are being developed in SEA economies, for example Wongnai in Thailand (an app startup providing restaurant search service) and Go-Jek in Indonesia, it is important to note that these startups are imitating business models generated from advanced Western countries then adapting them into the local context.

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Correspondence to Ching-Yan Wu .

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The authors would like to acknowledge that this study was funded by the Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan (grant number: 106–2420-H-007-008-). The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

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Lo, HC., Wu, CY., Hu, MC. (2020). Acting as an innovation niche seeder:how can the reverse salient of southeast Asian economies be overcome?. In: Pyka, A., Lee, K. (eds) Innovation, Catch-up and Sustainable Development. Economic Complexity and Evolution. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-84931-3_11

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