Pregled bibliografske jedinice broj: 761841
Smart specialisation in Croatia: between the cluster and technological specialisation
Smart specialisation in Croatia: between the cluster and technological specialisation // Journal of the knowledge economy, 6 (2015), 2; 270-295 doi:10.1007/s13132-015-0238-7 (međunarodna recenzija, članak, znanstveni)
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Naslov
Smart specialisation in Croatia: between the cluster and technological specialisation
Autori
Bečić, Emira ; Švarc, Jadranka
Izvornik
Journal of the knowledge economy (1868-7865) 6
(2015), 2;
270-295
Vrsta, podvrsta i kategorija rada
Radovi u časopisima, članak, znanstveni
Ključne riječi
Smart specialisation ; Croatia ; Key enabling technologies ; Technology followers
Sažetak
The paper discusses the particularities of the implementation of the concept of smart specialisation in the innovation follower countries using the example of Croatia. Croatian experience suggests that a level of economic and technological development enables the realisation of a reduced concept of smart specialisation that is focused on the development of existing business clusters, industries and ventures of lower technological complexity while technological specialisation through supporting frontier research and key enabling technologies (KETs) is difficult to attain. Therefore, there is a threat that KETs will be formally included in the strategy for smart specialisation but their development in practice may prove to be a failure. This narrow concept of smart specialisation is perceived as inferior to the smart specialisation which nurture fundamental and generic knowledge, education and skills needed for putting the key technologies into work since it keeps the regions/countries captured in uncompetitive industries with low profit and weak employment abilities. The reasons for such a limited realisation of smart specialisation in Croatia are numerous of which a long-term technological backwardness, excessive tertiarisation of economy in the low-profit/skills sectors, serious underinvestment in science and knowledge-based industries can be sorted out. From the innovation policy point of view, the neglect of research and technological specialisation is mostly a consequence of horizontal broad-based measures for fostering entrepreneurship, innovation and research without thematic prioritisation. In this context, the concept of smart specialisation is perceived as a useful tool for replacement of the current surplus of horizontal and mutually disconnected policy measures with a new policy mix build upon the concept of linking identified priority thematic areas with KETs and other cross-cutting themes such as tourism and information and communications technology (ICT).
Izvorni jezik
Engleski
Znanstvena područja
Sociologija
POVEZANOST RADA
Ustanove:
Institut društvenih znanosti Ivo Pilar, Zagreb
Citiraj ovu publikaciju:
Časopis indeksira:
- Scopus
- EconLit
Uključenost u ostale bibliografske baze podataka::
- EconLit
- Scopus, Google Scholar, ProQuest, Academic OneFile, ECONIS, Expanded Academic, OCLC, Research Papers in Economics (RePEc), SCImago, Summon by ProQuest