The impact of technology and innovation on
national growth and development in this increasingly
competitive world remain a concede fact. Its impacts can
be attributed to a long (time interval) and complex
processes which involves mutual reciprocal action or
influence of both the transferors (owners of technology)
and the recipients (receivers), including academia,
research and training institute, market, of course
government inputs. For many under-developed countries
like Nigeria, many factors affecting the persistence low
living standard, oscillatory movement in foreign
exchange rate is the highly unequal distribution of
technological capacity between the country and the
developed ones. These unequal in technological strengths
are observed in their capacity to often dictate the terms
and degrees in which technologies and foreign aids are
transferred to the country. The present empirical study
is aimed to contribute to the large existing literature on
technology transfer, affirm that skills acquired from
technology transfer can be fostered, improved and
advanced when individuals, expertise, firms (private and
public) are ready to take a major risk of been innovative
(ability to utilize, replicate, improve and, possibly re-sell
the new technology). It also draws our attention in
identifying barriers that mitigate successful acquisition
of new technologies. These barriers are in the form of
internal, external and international barriers transfer
technology and earnestly calling for a close and mutual
collaboration, integration and intellectual exchange
between the academia, research and training institutes,
industries, market and of cause undivided input from the
government.
Keywords : Development; Transferor and Recipient; Innovation; Technology Transfer.