Impressions about product quality and reliability can depend as much on perceptions about brands and country of origin as on data regarding performance and failure. This has implications for companies in developing countries that need to compete with importers. For manufacturers in industrialised countries it has implications for the value of transferred technologies. This article considers the issue of quality and reliability when technology is transferred between countries with different levels of development. It is based on UK and Chinese company case studies and questionnaire surveys undertaken among three company groups: UK manufacturers; Chinese manufacturers; Chinese users. Results show that all three groups recognise quality and reliability as important and support the premise that foreign technology based machines made in China carry a price premium over Chinese machines based on local technology. Closer examination reveals a number of important differences concerning the perceptions and reality of quality and reliability between the groups.
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1 July 2004
Research Article|
July 01 2004
International technology transfer: perceptions and reality of quality and reliability Available to Purchase
David Bennett;
David Bennett
Professor of Technology Management, Aston Business School, Birmingham, UK
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Hongyu Zhao
Hongyu Zhao
Senior Consultant, Euro‐Group International Inc., Beijing, China
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-7786
Print ISSN: 1741-038X
© Emerald Group Publishing Limited
2004
Journal of Manufacturing Technology Management (2004) 15 (5): 410–415.
Citation
Bennett D, Zhao H (2004), "International technology transfer: perceptions and reality of quality and reliability". Journal of Manufacturing Technology Management, Vol. 15 No. 5 pp. 410–415, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/17410380410540408
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