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Title Towards a firm-level technological capability framework to endorse and actualize the Fourth Industrial Revolution in developing countries
ID_Doc 18839
Authors Peerally, JA; Santiago, F; De Fuentes, C; Moghavvemi, S
Title Towards a firm-level technological capability framework to endorse and actualize the Fourth Industrial Revolution in developing countries
Year 2022
Published Research Policy, 51.0, 10
DOI 10.1016/j.respol.2022.104563
Abstract An essential precondition for developing countries to engage in the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) is to accelerate the creation and accumulation of firm-level technological capabilities necessary for digital transformation. Through an analysis of secondary data collected from a systematic review of the 4IR literature, we build on Lall's (1992) and Bell and Pavitt's (1995) frameworks, to develop an updated framework of firm-level technological capabilities which accounts for the refined set of human and organizational activities and resources required by firms for the uptake of 4IR technologies and processes along their digital transformation journey. The framework proposes four levels of increasingly complex technological capabilities across six thematic groups of technological and organizational functions. The framework represents an initial basis for examining the microlevel capabilities required by firms to launch, endorse and actualize the 4IR. Our analysis leads to a definition of 4IR firm-level technological capabilities which better reflects the new realities of this revolution. We discuss the implications of the proposed framework, and we conclude with the contributions of our study from the academic, policy and management perspectives.
Author Keywords Capability-building; Technological capabilities; Fourth Industrial Revolution; Developing countries; Firm-level; Manufacturing
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
EID WOS:000830915500003
WoS Category Management
Research Area Business & Economics
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