Comparing Global Adoption of New Technologies
Imagine two new, distinct innovations are developed for manufacturing smartphones:
- Innovation X: A new process that can assemble a smartphone using 20% less skilled labor and 15% fewer microchips than the current most efficient method.
- Innovation Y: A different new process that reduces the required skilled labor by 40% but increases the number of microchips needed by 10%.
Analyze and compare the likely global adoption patterns for Innovation X versus Innovation Y. In your response, explain the economic reasoning that would lead a country to adopt one, both, or neither of these innovations, considering that different countries have vastly different costs for labor and microchips.
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Global Technology Adoption Scenario
Country A has very low labor costs and uses a labor-intensive method to manufacture widgets. Country B has very low energy costs and uses an energy-intensive method for the same task. A new manufacturing technology is developed that can produce one widget using less labor than Country A's method AND less energy than Country B's method. Assuming the goal is to produce at the lowest possible cost, which country is likely to adopt the new technology in the long run?
A new manufacturing process is developed that produces one car using 10% less labor but 5% more electricity than the most common existing method. This new process will eventually be adopted by all car-manufacturing nations because it is more technologically advanced.
Explaining Universal Technology Adoption
Comparing Global Adoption of New Technologies
Match each technological innovation scenario with its most likely long-term adoption outcome, based on its effect on production inputs.
An economist is tasked with addressing severe traffic congestion in a major city. Following the principle that one must first diagnose the core problem before prescribing a treatment, arrange the following actions into the most logical sequence.
For a new production method to be universally adopted, it must be a '____' technology, meaning it can produce the same amount of output using fewer of all relevant inputs compared to existing methods.
A new textile loom is invented. To produce one standard bolt of cloth, it requires 2 hours of labor and 5 kWh of electricity. It is intended to replace two existing methods: Method A (Labor-Intensive) uses 5 hours of labor and 3 kWh of electricity, while Method B (Energy-Intensive) uses 1 hour of labor and 10 kWh of electricity. Based on an analysis of the inputs required, what is the most likely long-term global adoption outcome for the new loom?
A firm manufactures a product using one of two established methods: Method X, which is capital-intensive (2 machine-hours, 8 labor-hours per unit), or Method Y, which is labor-intensive (1 machine-hour, 12 labor-hours per unit). The firm is evaluating four new potential processes. Which of the following new processes represents a 'dominating technology' that would be universally adopted in the long run, regardless of the relative costs of labor and capital?