The US is the source of just about all the technologies that define modern life: personal computers, operating systems, smartphones, e-commerce, web browsers, email, search engines, social networks, electric cars and the rest. And most of the tech companies that created and monetized these technologies are also in the US.

In this book Mehran Gul, the winner of the Financial Times/McKinsey Bracken Bower Prize, asks: is that changing?

Less than a decade ago, the sentiment towards Chinese tech compa­nies was often dismissive and complacent. Now the alarm bells are ringing. But as the commentariat pontificates how the US–China tech battle will play out, an equally interesting question to ask is: are there more Chinas out there? Places no one is taking seriously now that might turn out to be massively competitive sooner than we think.

Samsung, a South Korean conglomerate, competes with Apple to be the world’s largest manufacturer of smartphones. Arm, founded in the UK, develops chip designs that are used in more than 90 per cent of all mobile devices. Spotify, based in Sweden, is the most popular music streaming service in the world.

That’s not all. The world’s most important semiconductor company, TSMC, is in Taiwan. The other most important company in the semiconductor industry, ASML, is in the Netherlands. Some of the world’s best-known games like Minecraft, Candy Crush and Angry Birds came from gaming studios in the Nordics. Nearly all the major electric battery manufacturers like CATL, LG, and SK On are in Asia.

This is a story about technology and the places where it finds its way into the world. Silicon Valley has for half a century been unrivalled in spinning out technologies and fast-growing, high-value, billion-dollar-plus tech companies, the Apples, Facebooks, Googles of the world, that made it the centre for the most rapid creation of wealth in human history. Its secrets are spreading to more places.

The geography of innovation is shifting. The world has a lot more high-value tech companies than ever before, growing a lot faster than ever before, in a lot more places than ever before. This is a book about these places.

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The US is the source of just about all the technologies that define modern life: personal computers, operating systems, smartphones, e-commerce, web browsers, email, search engines, social networks, electric cars and the rest. And most of the tech companies that created and monetized these technologies are also in the US.

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• A brilliant, accessible, entertaining contribution to our understanding of the international competition for new tech with global scope

• For business readers, but also for more general reader – it’s not a book about tech, so much about how tech’s influence is going to affect every aspect of our lives. It’s also inherently suited to the political reader, the Michael Lewis/Big Short reader, the Tim Marshall/Prisoners of Geography reader

• Gul works for the World Economic Forum as lead for digital transformation of industries. He has travelled to Japan, Singapore, China, India, Israel, Sweden and South Africa, among other countries, to research different “innovation hives” that are fostering start-ups and new technologies.

• He won the winner of the Financial Times and McKinsey Bracken Bower Prize for young authors

Competition: Good Economics for Hard Times;The Fourth Industrial Revolution;How Innovation Works;Has China Won; The Inevitable. Thomas Picketty; Yanis Varoufakis;Tim Marshall;Klaus Schwab; Matt Ridley; Abhijit V Banarjee; Esther Duflo;Kevin Kelly;Kishore Mahbubani

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780008327804
Publisert
2025-07-03
Utgiver
HarperCollins Publishers
Vekt
580 gr
Høyde
240 mm
Bredde
159 mm
Dybde
26 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
368

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Mehran Gul thinks and writes about technology and business. He is a winner of the Financial Times/McKinsey Bracken Bower Prize. He attended Yale where he was a Fulbright Scholar, Fox International Fellow, and Teaching Fellow. He has been a Lead for the Digital Transformation of Industries at the World Economic Forum and an expert on Higher Education, Entrepreneurship, and Industrial Policy at the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation.

Before Yale, he studied at the Lahore University of Management Sciences. He has been a visiting scholar at the Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi and a Fellow with the Acumen Fund. He lives in Switzerland and The New Geography of Innovation is his first book.

mehrangul.com

mehrang.substack.com