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INTRODUCTION TO SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNOLOGICAL ACTIVITIES 1

by
Roger Posadas
Science and technology cover a wide spectrum of different activities such as basic research, applied
research, experimental development, engineering, and others, all of which are terms in science and
technology policy.
Unfortunately, the internationally accepted definitions, distinctions, and
interrelationships of these activities are unfamiliar to many people, including some local scientists and
technologists who are supposed to know better. We must therefore define at the outset what we mean
by these activities, adopting the standard UNESCO and OECD definitions. 2
1. The Distinctions Between Science and Technology
Science refers to that dynamic, cumulative systems of verifiable concepts, principles, methods,
laws, theories, and processes which seek to describe, understand, and predict natural phenomena.
Technology, on the other hand, refers to that dynamic, cumulative system of reproducible
methods, techniques, and processes which may be derived from empirical know-how or scientific
knowledge and which are used by human societies for the production, improvement, and distribution of
goods and services as well as for the satisfaction of other material needs.
In terms of aims, science seeks to discover the workings of nature while technology seeks to
invent new or improved tools and materials (hardware) or better ways of doing things (software). In
other words, science is concerned with know-why, while technology is concerned with know-how.
The result of a scientific activity is new knowledge which is then usually published as a scientific paper,
while the result of a technological activity is a new product or process which is then usually
appropriated in the form of a patent and commercially exploited.
A scientist or practitioner of science is one who is actively engaged in generating new
knowledge, as distinguished from a scholar or professor of science who merely studies or teaches
science. A scientist is knowledge-oriented, while a technologist is product-oriented or process-oriented.
2. The Distinction Between Research and Experimental Development
Research is the process through which scientists attempt to discover new scientific knowledge.
It is often symbolized by the letter R.
Experimental Development is the process in which technologists utilize research findings or
empirical know-how in order to devise new or improved products or processes. Often symbolized by
the letter D, it covers activities up to the fabrication of prototypes, the stage of pilot-plant testing, and
1 EXCERPTED FROM :

Roger Posadas, Towards the Development of the Natural and Mathematical


Sciences in the Philippines ( A Science Policy Study Undertaken by the Kilusan ng mga Siyentipikong
Pilipino under the sponsorship of the Presidents Center for Special Studies, March 1982)
2 See, for example, UNESCO, An Introduction to Policy Analysis in Science and Technology. Paris,
1979.

the various pre-investment studies needed to ascertain the technical, economic, and social feasibility of
the new product or process.
The distinction between research and experimental development (R & D reflects the distinction
between science and technology. Research is what scientists do, while experimental development is
part of what technologists do.
3.

Basic Research, Applied Research, and Mission-Oriented Research

Basic or Fundamental Research is that type of research which seeks to discover new scientific
knowledge for its own sake without regard to its possible application. An example of this type of
research is afforded by research activities in theoretical physics.
Applied Research, on the other hand, is that type of research which seeks to discover new
scientific knowledge for the explicit purpose of applying it to some specific practical objective in
connection with a product or process. An example of this type of research is afforded by research
activities in the agricultural sciences.
Although there is no clear-cut delineation of the boundaries between basic and applied research,
it is obvious that by definition all research in the frontier areas of physics, biology, chemistry, and
mathematics are basic research, while all research in the agricultural, medical, and engineering
sciences are applied research.
Mission-oriented Research refers to those tightly organized, time-framed, and vertically
integrated R & D activities which are directed towards the attainment of a specific technological
objective or mission in connection with some social, economic, political, or military goal. The classic
examples of mission-oriented projects are the Manhattan Project, which produced the first atomic
bomb, and the Apollo Moon Project, which landed the first man on the moon.
4.

Engineering, Innovation, and Technology Transfer

Engineering refers to the processes required to make technology operative, that is, it consists of
the design, construction, and utilization of machines, equipment, installation, or processes in the
production and service sectors of the economy. The fundamental task of engineering is the provision of
services for production. It serves as the link between R & D and production.
Technological Innovation refers to the process of assessing, selecting, evaluating, designing,
adapting, testing, implementing, producing, and utilizing, and diffusing a new technology. It thus covers
the chain of activities from technology assessment to pre-investment work (feasibility studies) to
engineering to production or implementation to marketing or utilization to diffusion. It also includes the
selection, importation, and implantation of a foreign technology.
Transfer of Technology refers to the process of transplanting an operative technology, which has
been developed elsewhere, into a country where it has never been utilized before.

5. Scientific and Technological Services (STS)

Scientific and Technological Services (STS) cover a mixed group of activities which collect,
store, process, package, and disseminate scientific and technological information or provide other
auxiliary services in support of research, experimental development, and technological innovation.
Included among STS are the following:

6.

(a)

Scientific, Library, Information and Documentation, Translation Services

(b)

Scientific Testing, Analysis, Calibration, Instrumentation, Standards, Quality-Control, and


Computing Services

(c)

Scientific Observation, Surveying, Mapping, and Monitoring of the Environment and


Natural Resources

(d)

Scientific and Technological Collections, Museums, Exhibitions, and Gardens

(e)

Scientific and Technological Assessment, Extension, Consultancy, Advisory, Counseling,


and Patent Services

(f)

General-Purposes Data Collection and Statistical Compilation.

Scientific, Technological, and Technical Education, Training, and Popularization

Science Education refers to the teaching of science and mathematics at the primary and
secondary level. Its principal aim are (a) the inculcation of scientific values, attitudes, and outlook as
prerequisites to the development of a scientific culture, (b) the propagation of the scientific method
and critical thinking, and (c) the transmission of basic scientific concepts, ideas, and principles
needed for attaining some basic degree of scientific literacy.
Scientific Education and Training refers to the education and training at the university level of
basic and applied scientists as well as science teachers.
Technological Education and Training refers to the education and training at the university level
of professional engineers, R & D engineers, and other technologists.
Technical Education and Training
technical teachers.

refers to the education and training of technicians and

Scientific and Technological Popularization refers to the promotion of science consciousness


among the general public through popular media presentations of scientific and technological wonders,
science books and magazines for laymen, science fairs, etc.
7.

Interrelationship of Science and Technology


In past centuries, science and technology developed separately and independently with only
occasional, weak, but symbiotic interactions between them.3
Nowadays, however, much of modern advanced technology (e.g. transistors, microchips,
recombinant DNA, polymers, lasers, computers, robots) have depended so much on the recent findings
3 Derek J. De Solla Price, Is Technology Historically Independent of Science? A Study in Statistical

Historiography. Technology and Culture 6 (1965) pp. 553-568.


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of modern science that modern science that modern technology can be rightly called applied science.
In turn, modern scientific research has become heavily dependent on the latest technological
hardware and software.
In the current scientific and technological revolution, the time interval between scientific
discovery and technological utilization has been steadily decreasing: it is nowadays estimated to be
about a year or two.
This close interlinkage and strong interaction between modern science and technology may be
represented by means of a double-feedback system as depicted in Diagram 1, which has been adapted
from UNESCO4
8.The Disciplines of Science and Technology
For completeness, we should also list down the various disciplines of science and technology
according to the following more or less standard classification.5
Basic Sciences or Natural and Mathematical Sciences:
BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
CHEMISTRY
EARTH SCIENCES
PHYSICS
MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES
Applied Sciences or Technological Sciences:
AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES
ENGINEERING SCIENCES
MEDICAL SCIENCES
9.

Various Aspects and Types of Technology

Technology, as previously defined in Chapter II, is the system of know-how, skills, techniques,
and processes which enable societies to produce, distribute, install, maintain, or improve goods and
services needed to satisfy human needs. It may be embodied in either a material form (i.e.,
machineries, equipment, tools, factories, structures, and other hardware) or an informational form
(i.e., patents, blueprints, diagrams, formulae, and other software).
A technology, which gets implemented and utilized, becomes an operative technology. It is also
useful to distinguish between an operative technologys static aspect and dynamic aspect.6 The former
refers to the know-how and skills which permit its possessor to execute the technologys routine
operations (e.g. key-punching, typing, welding, metal-pressing, casting, etc.) The latter refers to the
know-how and skills which endow its possessor with a comprehension of the scientific principles
underlying the technology and thus with a capacity to develop and design an improved version of the
technology.

4 UNESCO, op. Cit., p.8


5 cf. UNESCO, Methods of Priority Determination in Science and Technology. Paris, 1978.
6 Farrel, T.M.A., Do Multinational Corporations Really Transfer Technology? in Integration of

Science and Technology with Development, op. Cit., p. 71.


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Advanced Technologies, Frontier Technologies, or High Technologies are terms used for the
modern, sophisticated technologies which began to develop since the 1950s out of modern research
findings in the basic sciences.
Among such technologies are solid-state electronics, computers,
cryogenics, lasers, polymers, genetic engineering, materials science, nuclear fission power, nuclear
fusion power, space technology, oceanic technology, automation, robotics, etc.
Appropriate Technologies, Intermediate Technologies, or Alternative Technologies refer to
those technologies which are low-cost, low-level in complexity, small scale, labor-intensive, suited to
local materials and skills, designed for decentralized and renewable energy sources, and oriented
towards rural industries. These terms have gained prominence in recent years in the context of
Schumachers book, Small Is Beautiful.7
In a rural setting, appropriate technologies would be
intermediate between a carabao-drawn plow and a tractor.
10.Technological Innovation
Technological innovation, as previously defined, is the process by which R & D results are
applied, implemented, utilized, and diffused. It is a complicated process requiring considerable human,
material, and financial resources. In fact, the magnitude or expenditure on innovation is usually much
greater (by at least ten times) than the amount spent on R & D.8
Technological innovation, as also pointed out earlier, is not an automatic consequence of R & D.
It results more from the pull of national development needs or of market requirements rather than from
the push of scientific discoveries or technical inventions. The need for technological innovation may
arise in response to either of the following:
(a) market opportunities or requirements at the business enterprise level; or
(b) national development goals and objectives ( or missions ) at the government level.
Therefore, the first major prerequisite of technological innovation is the clear and concrete
delineation and prioritization of objectives and needs, whether at the national or enterprise level. To
determine the required S & T inputs, these social, economic, or political objectives and needs must
then be translated into a set of specific S & T objectives, targets, and requirements.
The second major prerequisite is the availability of an adequate pool of resources -- human,
infrastructural, informational, and financial -- which can be mobilized to carry out the process of
technological innovation. These resources include not only the countrys scientific and technological
potential but also its entrepreneurial and managerial capabilities, financial resources, infrastructure for
production and distribution, and international resources.
The third major prerequisite is a technological innovation strategy which specifies the ways and
means through which the resources ought to be harnessed in pursuit of the selected objectives.
These three prerequisites thus entail the formulation of a national science and technology plan at
the government level or an equivalent plan at the enterprise level.
Such a plan is essentially an
attempt to formulate a coherent set of answers to the following questions:
(a)What are the scientific and technological components (or required S & T inputs) of the selected
socio-economic objectives
7 Schumacher, E.F., Small is Beautiful. Abacus: London, 1973
8 UNESCO, Science and Technology in Asian Development, op. Cit., p.146
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(b)
What are the optimal ways and means of harnessing scientific and technological resources in
order to attain these objectives
(c)
What are the scientific and technological resources that ought to be developed in order to insure
an adequate supply of needed S & T inputs?
11.

The Two Modes of Technological Innovation

Technological innovation -- the process of implanting a new technology in the production or


service sectors of the economy -- can be implemented through two modes:
(a) Domestic Generation and Utilization of New Technology
This is the process in which scientific knowledge is locally developed and applied through the
sequence of research --- experimental --- development --- engineering --- production or implementation
--- diffusion
(b) Importation and Assimilation of Operative Technology
This is the process of technology transfer, whereby an operative technology developed
elsewhere is transplanted into the country through commercial or other channels.
UNESCO uses the terms vertical transfer of technology for the domestic generation of
technology and horizontal transfer of technology for the importation of an operative technology.9 We
believe, however, that the term vertical transfer of technology is inappropriate because what is
involved in this process is not a mere displacement or relocation of a technology, as the word transfer
connotes, but a qualitative transformation of knowledge from usable knowledge into used
knowledge, from science to technology. Thus, in this paper the term transfer of technology shall be
used strictly in its proper sense of transplanting an operative technology from one
social/economic/political/ cultural setting to a different one.
12.Channels and Types of Technology Transfer
Technology may be transferred in the form of technical expertise, software (technological
information), or hardware (machines, equipment, and materials).
Transfer of technology may proceed through either of two channels:
(a)
Non-commercial Transfer - These are transfers of technical expertise, information, or equipment
through bilateral or multilateral S & T assistance and cooperation programs
(b)
Commercial Transfers - These are transfers carried out through contractual arrangements with
transnational corporations (TNCs) and other commercial firms.
The main types of commercial transfer of technology from highly developed countries
(HDCs) to less developed countries (LDCs) are the following:
(a) Sale by HDC firms of machineries, equipment, tools, and accessories to LDCs through
marketing agreements with LDC agents and distributors;
(b) Sale by HDC firms of complete industrial plants to LDCs on a turnkey basis;
9 UNESCO, An Introduction to Policy Analysis, op. Cit., p. 51.
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(c) Lease by HDC firms of their operative technologies to LDC firms for the manufacture of
foreign-brand products under a licensing agreement;
(d) Direct investment of a TNC in an LDC through the establishment of an LDC subsidiary of the
TNC;
(e) Entering of a TNC into a joint venture with an LDC firm; and
(f) Sale by HDC firms of technical services to LDCs through service contracts or management
contracts.
13.

Stages in the Absorption of Foreign Technology

A foreign operative technology usually passes through several stages of absorption before it is
fully assimilated by the receiving country:
(a) Use of imported machinery, equipment, and products;
(b) Provision of local maintenance, check-up, and quality-control services;
(c) Establishment of repair workshop;
(d) Local assembly or packaging of the foreign product;
(e) Local production of individual parts to on-site assembly;
(f) Local production of major components geared to on-site assembly;
(g) Fitting up of machinery and organization of production (i.e., manufacturing engineering);
(h) Design engineering of new machinery, equipment, or products;
(I) Experimental development of prototypes and pilot plants.
14.

TNC Constraints to Technology Transfer

While TNCs are often identified as the major vehicles for commercial transfer of technology,
their actual practices obstruct the effective transfer of technology to LDCs. Among their notorious
practices are the following:
(a) Concentration of all R & D in their parent company based in an HDC;
(b) Restriction of the know-how transferred to an LDC to the static aspect of the technology;
(c) Distribution of the manufacture of product components among several LDCs to prevent a single
LDC from acquiring the complete technology;
(d) Closed-door manufacturing of a high-technology product within free trade zones in an LDC to
prevent absorption and diffusion of advanced technologies;

(e) Attempt to obtain monopoly and then monosony on the national market in an LDC.
15.

Costs of Technology Transfer

The costs involved in commercial technology transfer can be classified as direct costs and
indirect costs;
Direct Costs:
(a)
Expenses incurred in acquiring the necessary technical know-how at the pre-investment,
investment, and operational stages of the commercial transfer
(b)

Payments for patents, manufacturing licenses, trademarks, etc.

Indirect Costs:
(a)
Outflow of foreign currency due to overpricing by TNC subsidiaries of imports of intermediary
products, spare parts, and equipment
(b)
Outflow of foreign currency due to repatriation by TNC subsidiaries of their profits to the TNC
parent
(c)
Indirect costs arising from contractual restrictions by TNCs on the export of products by their
subsidiaries
(d)
Indirect costs arising from accounting manipulations of TNC subsidiaries which enable them to
minimize payment of local taxes or customs duties
(e)
Indirect costs of various other inputs, resources, and expertise linked to commercial
transactions of technology transfer with TNCs
(f) Indirect costs entailed by the stifling of domestic technological innovations and the perpetuation of
technological dependence on TNCs.
16.

Measures to Reduce Costs of Technology Transfer


Among the measures that an LDC can take in an attempt to reduce costs of technology transfer

are:10
(a)Unpackaging - Differentiation and separate evaluation of the various inputs contained in the
investment-cum-technology package. This can help strengthen negotiating capacity in the selection
and acquisition of the technology and other foreign inputs under convenient financial terms
(b) Unbundling - Disaggregation of the technological input into its core components (such as process
know-how and basic engineering) and peripheral components (design engineering, civil, electrical
and other engineering, pre-investment services, technical assistance in plant layout, etc.). This

10 Vaitsos, Constantine, Government Policies for Bargaining with Transnational Enterprises in the

Acquisition of Technology in Mobilizing Technology for Development.


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helps to identify those components that can be supplied by local consulting and engineering
services, local suppliers of intermediate and capital goods, and local R & D institutions.
(c) Alternative Sourcing - Search for alternative sources of technology so as to increase capacity for
bargaining and selection. This requires an effective S & T intelligence system for collecting and
processing information on various types and sources of technologies.
It should be pointed out, however, that in most cases TNCs are able to counter the above
measures because of the following:
(a) Tendency of operative technologies to become standardized
(b) Cartelistic collusion of TNCs in the international market
17.

Impacts of Technology Transfer


Technology transfer can have the following impacts on a host LDC:

(a) Technological Impacts - These are the effects on the LDCs scientific and technological development
(b) Economic Impacts - These are the effects on the LDCs trade patterns, access to markets, industrial
restructuring, local infrastructure, employment, etc
(c) Socio-Cultural Impacts - These are the effects on the quality of life, consumer preferences, social
mobility, lifestyles, culture, etc.,
(d) Political Impacts - These are the effects on political independence, foreign policy, composition of
elites, etc.
Of crucial importance to science and technology policy is the far-reaching impact of technology
transfer on overall national scientific and technological development. Unfortunately, this impact is
usually obscured because of the tendency of LDCs to put together emphasis on the immediate
development impacts of imported operative technologies. This short-sighted approach can lead to the
depreciation and the restriction of efforts to build up the national scientific and technological potential.
18.

Domestic Generation of Technology

The process of innovation by domestic generation of technology is nowadays undertaken


through the vertical integration of basic research, applied research, experimental development, and
engineering within so-called mission-oriented programs, which are carried out in a mission-oriented R
& D institution or a technological innovation center. This vertical type of integration may be contrasted
with the horizontal integration of research according to scientific disciplines which are carried out
mainly in universities and sometimes called discipline-oriented research.
Mission-oriented R & D programs aim to develop new technologies or adapt existing ones for the
purpose of meeting specific technological needs arising from national developments goals. The classic
examples of such programs are the Manhattan Project which produce the first atomic bomb and the
Apollo Project which landed the first man on the moon.

19.

Stimulation of Domestic Technological Innovation


Among the means of stimulating domestic innovation are the following:

(a) Promotion and financing of inventions and their commercial utilization


(b) Encouragement of industrial firms to form cooperative research associations for the purposes of
improving productivity or adapting new manufacturing processes
(c) Establishment of industrial innovation centers (e.g. Korean Institute of Science and Technology,
Applied Science Research Corporation of Thailand, etc.) which will be responsible for adapting or
developing new products and processes.
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Importance of Domestic Technological Innovation

Though it may appear that the modernization of LDCs is possible through technology transfer
alone, there is a general consensus that domestic technological innovation by LDCs is essential to their
development for the following reasons:11
(a)Domestic technological innovation is indispensable to the satisfactory solution of problems arising
from the peculiarities of an LDC s climate, soil, geology, and other environmental factors.
(b)
Domestic technological innovation is essential for a full awareness of the latest available
technologies abroad and for an optimal selection of the most suitable foreign technology to be
imported.
(c)
Domestic technological innovation provides an LDC with the scientific and technological
information needed to strengthen it bargaining position in the negotiation of commercial technology
transfer.
(d)
Domestic technological innovation is essential to the successful adaptation and absorption of
foreign technologies.
21.

Relationship Between the Two Types of Innovation

It should be clear then that the importation of foreign technology and the domestic generation of
technology are not alternative policies but rather complementary aspects of technological innovation. A
satisfactory strategy for technological progress must involved an optimum combination of assimilating
scientific and technological advances from other countries and of strengthening the domestic capacity
for R & D , innovation, and diffusion. As UNESCO puts it,
A balance must be established between the volume of scientific information and
technological know-how imported on the one hand and the national scientific and technological
infrastructure, on the other. This problem is particularly acute in the developing countries.
Although the amount of technological knowledge imported by a developing country depends
upon its economic potential and the aims of its economic policy, it needs an adequate scientific

11 UNESCO, Science and Technology in African Development, op. Cit., p. 153


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infrastructure if it is to keep in touch with scientific research in other countries and be able to
absorb the scientific information and technological know-how imported from them.12
The main link between the importation of technology and domestic generation of technology
stems from the fact that an LDC can achieve technological self-reliance and progress only through a
strong domestic capacity for initially adapting and assimilating the best available foreign technology and
eventually generating its own technological innovations. It has to be stressed that an LDC which
confines itself to the adaptation of foreign technology will always find itself technologically and
economically dependent on others. An LDC must therefore strive to achieve technological self-reliance
on an advanced level in order to attain a self-reliant, self-sustaining economic progress based on
domestic technological innovations.
The interrelationships between the importation of foreign technology (horizontal technology
transfer), the domestic generation of technology (vertical technology transfer), and the national
planning process are depicted schematically in Diagram 4, which has been adopted from UNESCO.13
22.Importance of Basic Research in Technological Innovation
While the need for domestic technological innovation in an LDC is generally recognized, the
importance of basic research the innovation process still has to be emphasized for it is not yet obvious
to everybody that applied research and innovation can never survive as self-generating activities
without the necessary component of basic research.
Basic research in an LDC serves the important functions of (a) providing informational access to
the dynamic aspects of modern technology and (b) providing advanced training for the countrys corps
of scientific experts.
It is for these reasons that the UN World Plan of Action stresses the necessity of basic research
even in the early stages of an LDCs national development. 14
The Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) points out the importance of basic research as follows:15
. . . I t might be argued that a small country would do well to concentrate on applied
research and live on the exploitation of research produced by the larger countries of the world.
Such a policy would be doomed to failure since the country in question would quickly lack a
general scientific consciousness of world advancement sufficient to allow it to select for
application those advances specifically significant to its economy. It would also lack trained
research and development. In fact, by neglecting fundamental research, a country would be
condemning its own industry to obsolescence.
23.Basic Research and the New Scientific and Technological Revolution
The need for a strong basic research capability in an LDC becomes even more crucial than ever
before in the light of the new scientific and technological revolution which has been producing such
sophisticated, high technologies as microelectronics, computers, lasers, synthetic materials, genetic
12 UNESCO, The Role of Science and Technology in Economic Development,

op. Cit., p.

17
13 UNESCO, Introduction to Policy Analysis . . . op. cit
14 United Nations, World Plan of Action . . . , op cit., pp. 9-12.
15 OECD, Science and Development, Paris, 1968.
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engineering, and robots and ushering in a new post-industrial civilization which Alvin Toffler calls the
Third Wave.16
While the old technologies such as steel making or oil refining are based on the relatively simple
electromechanical principles discovered in the 19th century, the new sophisticated technologies are
based on modern scientific knowledge of atomic and molecular processes and interactions. This
means that the mastery of the dynamic aspects of modern technologies requires an advanced
knowledge of such basic fields as solid-state physics, laser physics, low-temperature physics, polymer
chemistry, molecular biology, etc. It is for this reason that the new fast-growing industries being
spawned by these new, high technologies have come to be known as science-based industries or
knowledge-intensive industries.
The technological gap between HDCs and LDCs is certainly being widened further by this new
scientific and technological revolution. At the same time, however, it has now become easier for LDCs
to bridge this gap because the advanced become easier for LDCs to bridge this gap because the
advanced scientific knowledge, which holds the key to the mastery of the new high technologies, is
universally accessible to research workers in the basic sciences of physics, chemistry, biology,
mathematics, and earth sciences. Thus, a strong basic research program directed towards the
generation of selected high technologies provides the means by which an LDC can leapfrog the
technological gap, develop its own science-based industries, and achieve a certain degree of advanced
technological self-reliance.
Therefore, if an LDC is determined to overcome its technological and economic dependence and
to attain a self-reliant technological and economic progress, it should undertake a massive long-term
national scientific and technological development program whose principal component is the full
development of the natural and mathematical sciences and whose central thrust is the mastery,
generation, utilization, and diffusion of selected high technologies such as microelectronics, computer
technology, biotechnology, laser technology, materials technology, etc.
* * * END * * *

16 Alvin Toffler, The Third Wave. New York: Bantam Books, 1980
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