TOPICS IN INNOVATION ECONOMICS II
- Overview
- Assessment methods
- Learning objectives
- Contents
- Bibliography
- Delivery method
- Teaching methods
PART I: Basic notions in Mathematics for Economists are prerequisites.
PART II: None
PART I: The evaluation takes place entirely with a final exam
PART II: Written or oral exam, depending on the number of students
PART I: The course aims to introduce some notions which are milestones in the modern theory of decisions
PART II: ‘Innovation Economics’ will introduce master students into the broad field of modern innovation economics. Innovation economics has gained momentum since the 1990s as an autonomous field in economics qualified by the increasing importance of knowledge and innovation for the competitiveness of firms, regions and economies as well as by the peculiarities of innovations which makes innovation processes difficult to be analyzed in the context of standard industrial economics. It turned out that modern innovation economics has become a field of interdisciplinary research combining besides economists, among others technological historians, economic sociologist, engineers and complexity researchers. In this course students will be made acquainted to the most important concepts, schools, problems and methodologies in the analysis of innovation processes.
PART I: The following topics will be treated during the course:
1. Orders and Preferences;
2. Axioms on preferences;
3. Utility functions and preferences: Debreu's representation Theorem;
4. Partial orders and multiobjective optimization
PART II: Introduction
1. Why studying innovation economics?
2. A brief overview on modern innovation economics
3. Economic growth and innovation in economics
II. The basic concepts and approaches in innovation economics
4. The basic concepts
4.3. Forms of Innovation
4.4. The object of innovation activities
4.5. The subject of innovation activities
5. The different approaches in innovation economics
5.1. The allocation-theoretic perspective of neoclassical innovation economics
5.2. The neo-Schumpeterian (or evolutionary) approach to innovation economics
III. Modeling innovation processes
6. Technological Spillovers and Innovation Networks
7. Long term economic development and major transformations of socio-economic systems
PART I: Will be communicated during the course.
PART II: Nelson, R.R., Dosi, G., Helfat, C., Pyka, A., Saviotti, P.P., Lee, K., Dopfer, K., Malerba, F. and Winter, S. (2018), Modern Evolutionary Economics – An Overview, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, forthcoming.
PART I: Lectures in presence
PART II: Lectures in class (20 hrs)
Professors
Borrowers
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Degree course in: GLOBAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT