Thursday, March 4, 2010

The Innovation Delusion

Huffington Post (Ralph Gomory, Research Prof. NYU, Pres. Emeritus, Alfred P Sloan Foundation, Former IBM SVP Science-Tech) - Specializing in innovation is an attractive idea, but a misleading one; an idea that blinds us to what we really need to do. We need to do more than produce exciting new ideas; we must also be able to compete in large productive industries. This requires us to both balance trade and to motivate our corporations not only to innovate, but also to produce in this country. While this is hard to do, it can be done. Specializing in innovation, though often recommended, is in fact a delusion, an alluring path that in reality will lead us straight downhill...

Today our companies are motivated to take innovations abroad, produce there and import the goods into the United States. Increasingly we can expect services also to go overseas. We must produce here in the U.S.A., to employ the people of this country, and we must keep their activities effective by a steady stream of innovations in design and production. While other countries roll out a welcome mat of tax breaks and subsidies for our companies because their common sense tells them that their people being employed in productive work is the road to being a rich country, we provide no incentive for U.S. companies to produce here.

We cannot continue to have our corporations, faithful only to the interests of their shareholders, engage in a one-way flow of jobs, technology, and innovation out of the country. We need to realize that with globalization the interests of our country and of our global corporations have diverged. We can realign the interests of corporations with those of our country by rewarding companies that are productive here. And that can be done in ways that are consistent with our history and with the limited capabilities of our government.

1 comment:

  1. Gomory certainly understands that you don't get ahead by just innovating unless you also produce the "innovated" product within the U.S. and use U.S. workers to do it. The ltimate question is -- do U.S. policy makers understand that the federal government must provide real incentives to persuade U.S. multinational and state-side companies to both innovate and produce in this nation?

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