Maskus, Keith E.Hoekman, Bernard M.Saggi, Kamal2013-06-252013-06-252004-06https://hdl.handle.net/10986/14181The authors analyze national and international policy options to encourage the international transfer of technology, distinguishing between four major channels of such transfer: trade in products, trade in knowledge, foreign direct investment, and intra-national and international movement of people. They develop a typology of country types and appropriate policy rules of thumb as a guide to both national policymakers and rule making in the World Trade Organization, as policies should differentiate between countries. The authors also develop some rules of thumb for policy intervention. These include: 1) Liberal trade policies for all types of countries; 2) Temporary encouragement of foreign direct investment inflows for low-income countries; 3) Licensing for technical transformation and adaptive investments by local firms to apply technologies; 4) Policy options for source economies to encourage international transfer of technology to poor countries, including fiscal incentives, improvement of flows of public-domain technologies with appropriate subsidies, and price differentiation for exports of intellectual property products.en-USCC BY 3.0 IGOTRANSFER OF TECHNOLOGYFOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTSPOPULATION MOBILITYTRADE LIBERALIZATIONTRADE POLICIESTECHNOLOGY APPLICATIONSFISCAL INCENTIVE POLICIESINTELLECTUAL PROPERTY ACCESS TO CAPITALADAPT TECHNOLOGYAGRICULTUREASYMMETRIC INFORMATIONBALANCE OF PAYMENTSBIOTECHNOLOGIESBUSINESS DEVELOPMENTCAPITAL GOODSCAPITAL MARKETSCOMPARATIVE ADVANTAGECONSUMERSDEVELOPED COUNTRIESE-COMMERCEECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTECONOMIC GROWTHECONOMIC VALUEEMPLOYMENTENGINEERINGEXPENDITURESEXPORTSEXTERNALITIESEXTERNALITYFOREIGN INVESTMENTFOREIGN TECHNOLOGYGROWTH MODELSHUMAN CAPITALIMPERFECT COMPETITIONIMPORTSINCENTIVE EFFECTSINCOMEINCREASING RETURNSINDUSTRIALIZATIONINEFFICIENCYINFORMATION PROBLEMSINFORMATION TECHNOLOGYINTERMEDIATE GOODSINTERNATIONAL COOPERATIONINTERNATIONAL TECHNOLOGY TRANSFERINTERNATIONAL TRADEINVENTIONSINVESTMENT INCENTIVESKNOW-HOWLABOR FORCELDCSLEARNINGLOW INCOMELOW-INCOME COUNTRIESMARGINAL COSTMARKET FAILURESMARKET POWERMULTILATERAL TRADEMULTINATIONAL ENTERPRISESNEW PRODUCTSNEW TECHNOLOGIESNEW TECHNOLOGYOPEN MARKETSPATENTSPER CAPITA INCOMEPOLICY INSTRUMENTSPOLICY RESEARCHPOSITIVE EXTERNALITIESPOSITIVE SPILLOVERSPRIVATE SECTORPRODUCERSPRODUCTION PROCESSESPRODUCTION TECHNIQUESPRODUCTIVITYPRODUCTIVITY GROWTHPROGRAMSPROPERTY RIGHTSPUBLIC GOODSRECIPIENT COUNTRIESRESEARCH CENTERSROYALTIESSPILLOVERSTECHNOLOGICAL CHANGETECHNOLOGICAL INFORMATIONTECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATIONTECHNOLOGY ACQUISITIONTECHNOLOGY ADOPTIONTECHNOLOGY DIFFUSIONTECHNOLOGY MARKETSTECHNOLOGY TRANSFERTELECOMMUNICATIONSTOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITYTRADE BARRIERSTRADE NEGOTIATIONSTRADE POLICIESTRANSACTIONS COSTSTRANSITION ECONOMIESUNIVERSITIESVERTICAL TECHNOLOGY TRANSFERWORLD TRADE ORGANIZATIONWTOTransfer of Technology to Developing Countries: Unilateral and Multilateral Policy OptionsWorld Bank10.1596/1813-9450-3332