The Microcomputer Industry in Brazil: The Case of a Protected High-Technology IndustryBloomsbury Academic, 20 ÁÕ.¤. 1996 - 192 ˹éÒ In 1977 Brazil initiated the market reserve policy to protect and reserve its domestic market for its own computer manufacturing companies. The basic assumptions on which its plans rested were fatally flawed, however, and the experiment failed to a large degree. This work investigates to what extent the policy, so carefully fashioned, fell short of its target and left Brazil with expensive and poorly made products. The author also evaluated the important and influential role of Brazil's bureaucracy and military. Scholars of economic development, industrial organization, economic history, and technology should find this well-documented work valuable. |
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History of Informatics Policy in Brazil | 1 |
Analysis of the Institutional Evolution of the Market Reserve | 31 |
The Origin of the Market Reserve Policy and the Transition | 37 |
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ABICOMP agency approved Boletim Informativo-SEI Brasília Brazil Brazilian microcomputers bureaucratic capital CAPRE CAPRE's chapter coefficients companies competition computers Congress CONIN consumer surplus cont'd coordinating minister cruzeiros data-processing Decree DEPIN discussed domestic market domestic producers dummies economic economies of scale equipment estimate export fiscal incentives fixed costs foreign hedonic hedonic regressions Herfindahl index IBM-PC IBM-PC clones import Informática informatics industry Informatics Law informatics policy informatics products information asymmetry interest groups internal investments Itautec major market reserve policy market shares microcomputer industry microcomputer producers Microdigital microelectronics Microtec military MINICOM minicomputers models monitor Monydata Moreover multinationals national firms Paulo peripherals Piragibe Planning Ministry policymakers political Portaria president price index Prológica protection regressions regulators regulatory capture regulatory structure rent-seeking rents sample São Paulo Scopus sector SEI's SEI's policy Source strategy suppliers Table tariffs technology autonomy top producers U.S. Dollars user industries variables
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The Politics of High Tech Growth: Developmental Network States in the Global ... Sean O'Riain ªÁºÒ§Êèǹ¢Í§Ë¹Ñ§Ê×Í - 2004 |