During the past decade, foreign participation in U.S. research and development—through acquisition of R&D-intensive businesses, links with universities, and other arrangements—has expanded rapidly.
This emergence of foreign influence has drawn a mixed response—some regard the trend as a positive corollary to the expanding involvement of U.S.-owned companies in national markets abroad. Others consider it a net liability for Americans that often benefits foreign companies and their home economies at U.S. expense.
There exists a large gap in expert and public understanding of the drivers, nature, and consequences of foreign participation in the nation's technology enterprise. This volume seeks to close this gap and reviews:
The nature of R&D activities and how they contribute to economic development.
The causes, scope, and nature of foreign involvement in U.S.-based R&D activity and the associated costs, risks, benefits, and opportunities of this trend.
The merits and liabilities of policies to regulate foreign R&D participation.
Table of Contents
Front Matter
Executive Summary
Introduction
The Contribution of R&D to U.S. Economic Development
Foreign Participation in Privately Funded U.S. R&D
Foreign Participation in Publicly Funded U.S. R&D
Findings and Recommendations
References
Committee and Staff Biographies
Agenda
Participants
Index