Publication

1995 - Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, England

Language

English

Word Count

49,750 words, Guess

Page Count

199 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • LibraryThing3558825
  • Goodreads3435014

Classifications

  • DDC338.4761510973
  • LCCHD9666.5 .G35 1995

Description

This book examines an increasingly important phenomenon for competitiveness and innovation in industry: namely, the growing use of scientific principles in industrial research. Industrial innovation still arises from systematic trial-and-error experiments with many designs and objects, but these experiments are now being guided by a more rational understanding of phenomena. This has important implications for market structure, firm strategies, and competition. Science and innovation focuses on the pharmaceutical industry. It discusses the changes that the notable advances in the life sciences in the 1980s have brought to the strategies of drug companies, the organization of their internal research, their relationships with scientific institutions, the division of labor between large pharmaceutical firms and small research-intensive suppliers, the productivity of drug discovery, and the productivity of R&D.

Subjects

Topics

DrugsCostsHistoryResearchPharmacyDrugs, researchEconomic aspects

Places

Other Editions

  • Science and innovation: the US pharmaceutical industry during the 1980sCambridge University Press1995-01-01

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