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Innovation for the Masses
- How to Share the Benefits of the High-Tech Economy
- Narrated by: Keval Shah
- Length: 7 hrs and 52 mins
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Summary
An engaging solutions-oriented look at how cities and nations can better navigate issues of innovation and inequality.
From San Francisco to Shanghai, many of the world's most innovative places are highly unequal, with the benefits going to a small few. Rather than simply asking how we can create more high-tech cities and nations, Innovation for the Masses focuses on places that manage to foster innovation while also delivering the benefits more widely and equally. In this book, economist Neil Lee draws on case studies of Taiwan, Sweden, Austria, and Switzerland to set out how innovation can be successfully balanced toward equity.
As high-tech economies around the world suffer from polarized labor markets and political realities that lock in these problems, this book looks beyond the United States to other models of distributing a leading-edge economy. Lee emphasizes the active role of the state in creating frameworks to ensure that benefits are broadly shared, and he reveals that strong policies for innovation and shared prosperity are mutually reinforcing. Ultimately, Innovation for the Masses provides a vital window into alternative models that prioritize equity, the roadblocks these models present, and what other countries can learn from them going forward.
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- 27-03-24
Not engaging
I tried, but ultimately failed at chapter 4 to get interested in a topic I am already interested in. It wasn't helped by the narrator, who insists on saying the currency first (e.g. "US Dollar 5000") and didn't seem to be enjoying it any more than I did.
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