Skill transferability and the stability of transition pathways - a learning-based explanation for patterns of diffusion

Understanding and governing technology transitions is essential to cope with major challenges of the 21st century such as climate change or digitization. In this paper, a learning-based approach is developed to explain the dynamics of different transition pathways. Technological know-how is necessar...

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Main Author: Hötte, K
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2021
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author Hötte, K
author_facet Hötte, K
author_sort Hötte, K
collection OXFORD
description Understanding and governing technology transitions is essential to cope with major challenges of the 21st century such as climate change or digitization. In this paper, a learning-based approach is developed to explain the dynamics of different transition pathways. Technological know-how is necessary to make effective use of new machinery and capital goods. Firms and employees accumulate technology-specific knowledge when working with specific machinery. Radical innovation differs by technology type and pre-existing knowledge may be imperfectly transferable across types. This paper addresses the implications of cross-technology transferability of skills for firm-level technology adoption and its consequences for the direction of macro-level technological change. A microeconomically founded model of technological learning is introduced. The model is based on empirical and theoretical insights from the innovation literature. In a simulation study using the macroeconomic ABM Eurace@unibi-eco and applied to the context of green technology diffusion, it is shown that a high transferability of knowledge has ambiguous effects. It accelerates the diffusion process initially but comes at the cost of long-term technological stability and specialization. For firms, it is easy to adopt new technology, but also easy to switch back to the incumbent type. Technological instability can be macroeconomically costly.
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spelling oxford-uuid:5ce564ba-a9af-4e65-b879-e1147780bb3d2022-03-26T17:31:08ZSkill transferability and the stability of transition pathways - a learning-based explanation for patterns of diffusionJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:5ce564ba-a9af-4e65-b879-e1147780bb3dEnglishSymplectic ElementsSpringer2021Hötte, KUnderstanding and governing technology transitions is essential to cope with major challenges of the 21st century such as climate change or digitization. In this paper, a learning-based approach is developed to explain the dynamics of different transition pathways. Technological know-how is necessary to make effective use of new machinery and capital goods. Firms and employees accumulate technology-specific knowledge when working with specific machinery. Radical innovation differs by technology type and pre-existing knowledge may be imperfectly transferable across types. This paper addresses the implications of cross-technology transferability of skills for firm-level technology adoption and its consequences for the direction of macro-level technological change. A microeconomically founded model of technological learning is introduced. The model is based on empirical and theoretical insights from the innovation literature. In a simulation study using the macroeconomic ABM Eurace@unibi-eco and applied to the context of green technology diffusion, it is shown that a high transferability of knowledge has ambiguous effects. It accelerates the diffusion process initially but comes at the cost of long-term technological stability and specialization. For firms, it is easy to adopt new technology, but also easy to switch back to the incumbent type. Technological instability can be macroeconomically costly.
spellingShingle Hötte, K
Skill transferability and the stability of transition pathways - a learning-based explanation for patterns of diffusion
title Skill transferability and the stability of transition pathways - a learning-based explanation for patterns of diffusion
title_full Skill transferability and the stability of transition pathways - a learning-based explanation for patterns of diffusion
title_fullStr Skill transferability and the stability of transition pathways - a learning-based explanation for patterns of diffusion
title_full_unstemmed Skill transferability and the stability of transition pathways - a learning-based explanation for patterns of diffusion
title_short Skill transferability and the stability of transition pathways - a learning-based explanation for patterns of diffusion
title_sort skill transferability and the stability of transition pathways a learning based explanation for patterns of diffusion
work_keys_str_mv AT hottek skilltransferabilityandthestabilityoftransitionpathwaysalearningbasedexplanationforpatternsofdiffusion