02697cam a2200277 45000010005000000080039000050100015000440200022000590820017000811000034000981100083001322450151002152600043003663000037004095000141004465040040005875051194006275200336018216000050021576500033022076500039022406500060022797000017023397000022023567000041023787262040922s2005 gw ab b 100 0 eng a2004113933 a3540226133 (hbk.)00a338/.064222 aCantner, Uwe bcdeeditorq2 aInternational Schumpeter Society.bMeetingn(9th :d2002 :cGainesville, Fla.)10aEntrepreneurship, the new economy and public policy :bSchumpeterian perspectives /cUwe Cantner, Elias Dinopoulos, Robert F. Lanzillotti, editors aBerlin ;aNew York :bSpringer,cc2005 avi, 345 p. :bill., map ;c25 cm aPapers presented at the 9th International Joseph A. Schumpeter Society Congress held in 2002 at the University of Florida in Gainesville aIncludes bibliographical references aEditorial.- Reflections on the Schumpeter I knew well.- Schumpeter, product innovation and public policy: the case of cigarettes.- Risk, variety and volatility: growth, innovation and stock prices in early industry evolution.- Social networks and industrial geography.- Growing Silicon Valley on a landscape: an agent-based approach to high-tech industrial clusters.- The theory of the firm and the markets for strategic acquisitions.- The growth of commercialization - facilitating organizations and practices: A Schumpeterian perspective.- On the macroeconomic effects of establishing tradability in weak property rights.- Capital in the new economy: A Schumpeterian perspective.- A comparative perspective on innovation and productivity in manufacturing and services.- Tracing empirical trails of Schumpeterian development.- Towards an evolutionary interpretation of aggregate labor market regularities.- An evolutionary model of international competition and growth.- Innovation and growth in Germany over the past 150 years.- Nonlinear dynamism of innovation and business cycles.- The dynamic effects of general purpose technologies on Schumpeterian growth.grt aSilicon Valley is the most salient example of high-tech industrial clusters. A high-tech industrial cluster such as Silicon Valley is characterized by c- centratedentrepreneurship. Weproposeanagent- basedcomputationalmodeltoshowhow high-tech industrial clusters could emerge in a landscape in which no ?rms existed originally.10aSchumpeter, Joseph A.,d1883-1950vCongresses 0aEntrepreneurshipvCongresses 0aEvolutionary economicsvCongresses 0aTechnological innovationsxEconomic aspectsvCongresses1 aCantner, Uwe1 aDinopoulos, Elias1 aLanzillotti, Robert Franklin,d1921-