The emergence of India and China as economic powers has shifted the global
landscape and called into question the ability of the United States to compete.
Advantage sorts out the challenges the United States faces and focuses on
what drives innovation, what constrains it, and what strengths we have to leverage.
Entirely recasting the stakes of the debate, Adam Segal makes the compelling
case for the crucial role of the “software” of innovation. By bolstering its politics,
social relations, and institutions that move ideas from the lab to the marketplace, the
United States can preserve its position as a global power. With up-to-the minute economic
and political data, this is a resounding call to tie innovation to larger social goals in
an age of global science and technology.
Adam Segal is the Ira A. Lipman Senior Fellow for Counterterrorism and National
Security Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. His writings have appeared in the
Financial Times and the Wall Street Journal. He lives in New York City.
304 pages, Paperback