TITLE:
From Assembly Lines to Innovation Powerhouses: How Asia Transformed Its Technological Futures
AUTHORS:
Armando Herrera
KEYWORDS:
Industrial Transformation, Technological Innovation, Japan, South Korea, China, Manufacturing Strategy, R&D Investment, Government Policy, Technology Transfer, Emerging Economies, Global Competitiveness, Chile, Mexico
JOURNAL NAME:
Technology and Investment,
Vol.17 No.2,
March
13,
2026
ABSTRACT: The transformation of Japan, South Korea, and China from low-cost manufacturing bases into globally competitive innovation economies offers important insights into the institutional and organizational conditions that enable long term technological upgrading. A comparative review of these trajectories shows that innovation outcomes emerge from the interaction of aligned industrial policies, firm strategies, and education systems; the sequencing of learning before invention; the presence of organizational routines capable of converting research inputs into productivity gains; and the ability to deploy market scale and mission-oriented programs to accelerate diffusion. These shared mechanisms clarify why the three East Asian economies were able to accumulate capabilities rapidly and sustain advancement across increasingly complex technological domains. Contrasting these experiences with the contemporary cases of Mexico and Chile highlights persistent gaps in research intensity, institutional coordination, and firm level learning processes that continue to limit technology driven development in Latin America. The synthesis contributes to broader debates on latecomer innovation by identifying the institutional coherence, learning pathways, and organizational practices that underpin successful capability accumulation. The analysis also points toward future research opportunities involving digitalization, green transitions, and cross regional policy transfer, areas in which the relevance and adaptability of East Asian strategies merit further examination.