ABSTRACT

The basic proposition facing developers everywhere is that of increasing per capita material wealth, and it is almost axiomatic that, for the new, struggling countries, material improvement will depend upon the increasing of internal productivity. Ideally, increased output will be sought through those production systems which best organize the natural and human resources of the society. Since increased productivity in almost all cases will call for technological innovation, development principles must be made to strike at the heart of the problem by the isolation of new methods for injecting technological innovation into the society.