The Great Realignment: How the Changing Technology of Technological Change in Information Technology Affected the US and Japanese IT Industry, 1983-1999
This paper empirically shows that innovation in Information Technology (IT) has become
increasingly dependent on and intertwined with innovation in software. This change in the
nature of IT innovation has had differential effects on the performance of the United States and
Japan, two of the largest producers of IT globally. We document this linkage between software’s
contribution in IT innovation and the differential innovation performance of US and Japanese
electronics, semiconductors, and hardware firms. We collect patent data from USPTO in the
period 1980-2002 and use a citation function approach to formally show the trend of increasing
software dependence of IT innovation. Then, using a broad unbalanced panel of the largest US
and Japanese publicly listed IT firms in the period 1983-1999, we show that (a) Japanese IT
innovation relies less on software advances than US IT innovation, (b) the innovation
performance of Japanese IT firms is increasingly lagging behind that of their US counterparts,
particularly on IT sectors that are more software intensive, and (c) that US IT firms are
increasingly outperforming their Japanese counterparts, particularly in more software intensive
sectors. The findings of this paper could provide a fresh explanation for the relative decline of
the Japanese IT industry in the 1990s.