1. Digital Media in East Asia: National Innovation and the Transformation of a Region
- Author
-
Holroyd , Carin, Coates, Kenneth, Holroyd , Carin, and Coates, Kenneth
- Subjects
- Digital media--East Asia
- Abstract
The explosion of the digital media sector has had transformative implications for the 21st century, recasting economic structures and challenging societal norms. The advent of e-commerce, on-line gaming, e-books, mobile Internet, ubiquitous computing and other digital technologies and services has generated rapid and inchoate change around the world. Proponents of digital technologies argue that the digital economy could, if properly promoted, advance prosperity, create new businesses and shift economic, political and social power. In the aftermath of the Arab Spring of 2011, with growing awareness of the expansion of the mobile Internet across Africa and South Asia, and with the global dominance of Apple, Microsoft and Google, there is widespread consensus that this technological transformation is the most rapid and comprehensive in world history. While many observers understand that East Asian companies and countries have played a significant role in the growth of the digital sector, few understand the scale of the region's presence in what many see as the most vibrant element in the 21st century economy. On closer examination, however, it turns out that China, South Korea, Taiwan and Japan are more than prominent players in the new digital economy. Instead, as a collective force, East Asia dominates the global digital shift, producing much of the technology that underpins global digital integration and, now, establishing a steadily expanding presence in terms of digital content. The lack of systematic attention to the rise of the digital media sector is puzzling. South Korea and Japan are the most wired countries in the world, with truly impressive transmission speeds and low costs. Taiwan and China dominate the manufacture of the technological backbones of the new economy, while producing many of the most high profile digital products from notebook computers to the iPad. Japan's formidable presence in the production of video game consoles has been matched by the country's contributions in video games, anime and other digital content. Korea, led by Samsung, has emerged from the shadows to become one of the most digitally enabled and technologically aggressive countries in the world. Less well known is the fact that the country has pioneered multi-player online gaming, thus expanding the shape and nature of the online economy. If there has been limited understanding of the extent of East Asia's contributions to the digital sector, there is even less awareness of the role of national governments in the development of the manufacturing and content industries. The equally important question of the impact of mass digitization on regional integration has been left unexplored. Digital Media in East Asia sees digital media as an important element in the integration of South Korea, China, Japan and Taiwan, with economic/commercial interaction now being accompanied by regional sharing of content and services. It argues that the underappreciated scale of East Asian activity in this key sector is setting up the region as a global leader in the new economy, quietly building global dominance in manufacturing, digital implementations and, most recently, digital content production. The book also argues that the rise of prominence reflects the still active presence of national governments in East Asia in selecting and promoting commercial success in emerging industries. The combination of infrastructure development, regulation, investment, training and promotion used by each of the national governments in the study has produced impressive national and regional integration across manufacturing, service, government and education. The national innovation strategies of the East Asian governments have, in sum, produced impressive results, sparking widespread private sector investment and t
- Published
- 2012