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- 2011506693 abstract "This study identifies potential aviation technology development and procurement strategies, presents a general model of the options available to developing countries, and applies that model to explain Chinese procurement and aviation technology acquisition efforts over the last 60 years. The model articulates three main technology procurement avenues: purchase (buy), indigenous development (build), and espionage (steal), and three subavenues: reverse engineering (combining buy/steal and build), coproduction (combining buy and build), and codevelopment (combining buy and build, with an emphasis on build). It examines the costs, benefits, and tradeoffs inherent in each approach. Four variables influence decisions about the mix of strategies: (1) a country's overall level of economic development, in particular the state of its technical/industrial base; (2) the technological capacity of a country's military aviation sector; (3) the willingness of foreign countries to sell advanced military aircraft, key components, armaments, and related production technology; and (4) the country's bargaining power vis-avis potential suppliers.".
- 2011506693 contributor B12371358.
- 2011506693 contributor B12371359.
- 2011506693 contributor B12371360.
- 2011506693 coverage "China Armed Forces Procurement.".
- 2011506693 created "[2011]".
- 2011506693 date "2011".
- 2011506693 date "[2011]".
- 2011506693 dateCopyrighted "[2011]".
- 2011506693 description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 50-58).".
- 2011506693 description "This study identifies potential aviation technology development and procurement strategies, presents a general model of the options available to developing countries, and applies that model to explain Chinese procurement and aviation technology acquisition efforts over the last 60 years. The model articulates three main technology procurement avenues: purchase (buy), indigenous development (build), and espionage (steal), and three subavenues: reverse engineering (combining buy/steal and build), coproduction (combining buy and build), and codevelopment (combining buy and build, with an emphasis on build). It examines the costs, benefits, and tradeoffs inherent in each approach. Four variables influence decisions about the mix of strategies: (1) a country's overall level of economic development, in particular the state of its technical/industrial base; (2) the technological capacity of a country's military aviation sector; (3) the willingness of foreign countries to sell advanced military aircraft, key components, armaments, and related production technology; and (4) the country's bargaining power vis-avis potential suppliers.".
- 2011506693 extent "61p. ;".
- 2011506693 isPartOf "Institute for National Strategic Studies China strategic perspectives ; no. 4".
- 2011506693 issued "2011".
- 2011506693 issued "[2011]".
- 2011506693 language "eng".
- 2011506693 publisher "Washington, D.C. : National Defense University Press,".
- 2011506693 spatial "China Armed Forces Procurement.".
- 2011506693 spatial "China.".
- 2011506693 subject "Aeronautics, Military Technological innovations China.".
- 2011506693 subject "Aerospace industries China.".
- 2011506693 subject "UG635.C5 S28 2011".
- 2011506693 title "Buy, build, or steal : China's quest for advanced military aviation technologies / by Phillip C. Saunders and Joshua K. Wiseman.".
- 2011506693 type "text".