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Michel Carpentier on a strategy for European community electronics
Affiliation:1. Martti Ahtisaari Institute, Oulu Business School, University of Oulu, Finland;2. Infotech Oulu Focus Institute and Centre for Wireless Communications, University of Oulu, Finland;3. Centre for Wireless Communications, University of Oulu, and Nokia, Finland;4. Adam Smith Business School, University of Glasgow, UK;1. ISCTE Business School – Business Research Unit (BRU-IUL), Iscte - Lisbon University Institute, Lisbon, Portugal;2. UECE/REM – ISEG/ University of Lisbon, Portugal;3. SPRU, University of Sussex, UK;4. Member of the Board of the Portuguese Communications Regulator (ANACOM), Portugal;5. NOVA Information Management School (NOVA IMS), Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Campus de Campolide, 1070-312 Lisboa, Portugal;6. CEMAPRE/REM – ISEG/ University of Lisbon, Portugal;7. Consultant of the OECD, Paris, France;8. Research Fellow at The Center on Law and Regulation-University of Brasília (NDSR-UnB); Regulatory Specialist at the Brazilian Communications Regulator (Anatel), Brazil;9. NOVA IMS NOVA Information Management School (NOVA IMS), Universidade Nova de Lisboa; Analyst at the European Central Bank (ECB), Germany;10. Data & Strategic Analysis Director at Lodz University of Technology; Senior Advisor EMEA at Access Partnership Ltd.; Former President of the Polish Communications Regulator (UKE), Poland;11. Lumsa University; Member of the Regulatory Scrutiny Board (RSB); Former Member of the Board of the Italian Communications Regulator (AGCOM), Italy
Abstract:The European Community was born at the start of the micro-electronic age. The first transistor radio appeared in 1954, the Treaty of Rome was signed in 1957 and the first silicon chip made its debut in 1959. Now the electronics sector, broadly defined, is scheduled to be the biggest business in the world by the end of the century. At a time when Community leaders still thrash out the details of agricultural cooperation, as at their last Summit in Brussels in February, this article outlines the issues and strategies that underlie the mobilisation of the European information technology and telecommunications sectors to meet the international challenge of electronics in the 1990s.
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