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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Albert Fishlow , José Eustáquio Ribeiro Vieira Filho , José A. Scheinkman (Columbia University Department of Economics)Publisher: Columbia University Press Imprint: Columbia University Press ISBN: 9780231191708ISBN 10: 0231191707 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 04 August 2020 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsForeword, by José A. Scheinkman Acknowledgments 1. Introduction 2. Development Strategies in Brazil: A Contemporary View 3. The Role of Agricultural Innovation: From the Traditional Approach Toward a Theory of Technical and Institutional Change 4. Brazilian Agriculture: A Historical Perspective 5. Embrapa: A Case of Induced Institutional Innovation 6. The Competitiveness of Agribusiness in International Trade 7. Agricultural Expansion and Low-Carbon Emissions 8. The Structural Heterogeneity of Family Farming in Brazil 9. Is the Oil Ours? 10. The Technological Evolution of Embraer 11. Brazilian Agriculture and Beyond: Final Considerations Appendix A Appendix B Appendix C Appendix D Notes IndexReviewsWhile her economic progress has been erratic and uneven, Brazil has achieved world class status in several fields of agriculture, in deep sea petroleum extraction, and in relatively small airline aircraft. In each of these areas to a good extent the success has been the fruit of government established institutions designed to do R&D and other activities needed to advance technology. This book describes these developments in detail and depth. It is a fascinating story. -- Richard Nelson, Columbia University This book's treatment of the importance of innovation in the Brazilian agricultural sector and the role that Embrapa played in that innovation is extremely interesting, important, and original. -- Steven M. Helfand, University of California, Riverside Industry and agriculture are increasingly integrated, and technical change is more complex than a supplier-dominated sector approach. This book fills an important gap in the international literature on economics and innovation. -- Eliseu Roberto de Andrade Alves, founder and former President of Embrapa This volume provides a fresh and invaluable perspective on the country's development process. The book sheds new light on the historical role of agriculture in Brazilian development and, most importantly, on its recent resurgence as one of the most dynamic sectors in the country. It argues convincingly that recent agricultural expansion was technologically intensive, and therefore different from commodity booms of the past. The book goes on to examine the role of the state in other areas of Brazil's long-term development. This volume is bound to become a key reference in future studies on technological change driving expansion of the Brazilian economy. -- Rodrigo R. Soares, Columbia University While her economic progress has been erratic and uneven, Brazil has achieved world class status in several fields of agriculture, in deep sea petroleum extraction, and in relatively small airline aircraft. In each of these areas to a good extent the success has been the fruit of government established institutions designed to do R&D and other activities needed to advance technology. This book describes these developments in detail and depth. It is a fascinating story. -- Richard Nelson, Columbia University This book's treatment of the importance of innovation in the Brazilian agricultural sector and the role that Embrapa played in that innovation is extremely interesting, important, and original. -- Steven M. Helfand, University of California, Riverside Industry and agriculture are increasingly integrated, and technical change is more complex than a supplier-dominated sector approach. This book fills an important gap in the international literature on economics and innovation. -- Eliseu Roberto de Andrade Alves, founder and former President of Embrapa Fishlow and Vieira Filho highlight the relationship between science, technology, and productivity based on learning and institutional processes. Embrapa, Petrobras, and Embraer are three cases of institutional innovation in Brazil. This book fills an important gap in the international literature on economics and innovation. -- Eliseu Roberto de Andrade Alves, founder and former president of Embrapa This book's treatment of the importance of innovation in the Brazilian agricultural sector and the role that Embrapa played in that innovation is extremely interesting, important, and original. -- Steven M. Helfand, University of California, Riverside While its economic progress has been erratic and uneven, Brazil has achieved world-class status in several fields of agriculture, in deep sea petroleum extraction, and in relatively small airline aircraft. In each of these areas to a good extent the success has been the fruit of government-established institutions designed to do R&D and other activities needed to advance technology. This book describes these developments in detail and depth. It is a fascinating story. -- Richard Nelson, professor emeritus, Columbia University This volume provides a fresh and invaluable perspective on the country's development process. The book sheds new light on the historical role of agriculture in Brazilian development and, most importantly, on its recent resurgence as one of the most dynamic sectors in the country. It argues convincingly that recent agricultural expansion was technologically intensive and therefore different from commodity booms of the past. The book goes on to examine the role of the state in other areas of Brazil's long-term development. This volume is bound to become a key reference in future studies on technological change driving expansion of the Brazilian economy. -- Rodrigo R. Soares, Columbia University This book will best serve specialists who focus on Brazilian development, economic historians, and economists...Recommended. * Choice * This book's treatment of the importance of innovation in the Brazilian agricultural sector and the role that Embrapa played in that innovation is extremely interesting, important, and original. -- Steven M. Helfand, University of California, Riverside Author InformationAlbert Fishlow is professor emeritus at the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University. His many publications include Starting Over: Brazil Since 1985 (2011). José Eustáquio Ribeiro Vieira Filho is currently program director of the Office of the Executive Secretary of the Brazilian Ministry of Agriculture, Livestock, and Supply. He is on leave from his tenured position as a senior researcher at the Institute of Applied Economic Research (IPEA-Brazil). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |