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I3U Commitment 27 “A – Public Sector Innovation Scoreboard B – Research Programme on Public Sector and Social Innovation“ Venue: Vienna, I3U Project Meeting & Technical Workshop, 14-15.09.2015 Prepared by: WERI-SGH This project is co-funded by the European Union Commitment 27 "Starting in 2011, the Commission will support a substantial research programme on public sector and social innovation, looking at issues such as measurement and evaluation, financing and other barriers to scaling up and development. As an immediate step, it will pilot a European Public Sector Innovation Scoreboard as a basis for further work to benchmark public sector innovation. It will explore with Member States whether it is appropriate to bring together new learning experiences and networks for public sector leaders at European level." Causal relationships reflecting the impact of Commitment 27 H2: The use of good practice and benchmarking will result in a better performance of institutions and organisations limited understanding of the importance of social and public sector innovation financing research on social and public innovation dissemination of know-how and good practice benchmarking H1: Financing research on social innovation and public sector innovation will facilitate the dissemination of know-how and good practice better performance of institutions and organisations increased competitiveness H1: Financing research on social innovation and public sector innovation will facilitate the dissemination of know-how and good practice Concept of open innovation • Innovation in the private sector is usually protected from copying by others. • In the public sector, diffusion of innovation across the public (and private) organisations may ensure a better use of public resources (Moore, 1995; Mulgan and Albury, 2003; Rolfstam et al., 2011). Concept of innovation systems Financing research on social innovation may : • result in creating knowledge that produces positive externalities – creating new products, processes, and ideas arising from novel and unanticipated combinations • facilitate replication of findings • rise the social value of knowledge by lowering the chance that it will reside with persons (or groups) who lack the resources and ability to exploit it (for instance: Foray, 1995). H2: The use of good practice and benchmarking will result in a better performance of institutions and organisations Knowledge management theory Using innovation awards results in a higher rate of cooperation among public agencies (Borins, 2001) Benchmarking provides accessible knowledge base. It can also be used to improve accountability and mitigate risk by making informed decisions, supported by access to integrated, transparent information (West, 2005) Benchmarking motivates countries having poor results (Kouzmin, A., Loffler, E., Klages, H., Korac-Kakabadse,1999, N. Jeffrey J. Dorsch, Mahmoud M. Yasin, 1998). Indicators Indicator Source Expenditure on research related to social innovation European Commission, DG 2010-2014 Research EU 28 Number of implemented public sector OECD, European Commission 2014 innovations www.oecd.org/governance/p ublic-innovation Mean rank of EU28(EU27) in The The World Bank 2010-2013 Worldwide Governance Indicators www.govindicators.org (dimention Government Effectiveness Mean rank of EU28(EU27) in Doing The World Bank 2010-2014 Business www.doingbusiness.org EU 28 Mean rank of EU28(EU27) in the Global Competitiveness Index (pillars 1, 2, 9, 12) EU 28 World Economic Forum www.weforum.org Years 2010-2014 Coverage EU 28 EU 28 Commitment 27 map Commitment rationale Solution Main impact channels Main area of impact Indicators Insufficient information on legislation, barriers and public procurement linked to social innovation, role of social entrepreneurship and networks of practitioners Publishing thematic reports on funding and measurement of social innovation, dissemination of best practice Embeddedness: Naming and shaming Better understanding of innovations in the public sector Economic: Better performance of institutions and programmes More effective public spending in the field of social economy Improved business environment Reduction of cost of public services / public sector efficiency Input measures: A need for measurement framework and internationally comparable indicators in the field of social innovations and public sector innovations Financing research on social innovation and its role in the society and economy Governance: Guiding by common principles, Dissemination of the nowhow needed for innovation and policy-making, Benchmarking, Transfer of good practice, promotion of effective instruments Social: Improved user access to public information Faster delivery of public services Enhanced participation, empowerment Enhanced awareness of social innovation Networking Throughput measures: Number of new research projects / publications / methodologies / reports related to social innovation and public sector innovation Increasing demand for quality of public services Need for efficiency gains in the public sector Implementation of a measurement method / creation of European Public Sector Innovation Scoreboard Resource allocation and employment: Mobilizing and pooling of financial resources Expenditure on research related to social innovation Output measures: Number of implemented social innovations Number of innovations in the public sector Mean rank of EU28(EU27) in the Doing Business ranking Mean rank of EU28(EU27) in the Global Competitiveness Survey Outcome Competitiveness GDP Innovation Next steps 1. Assessing the impact of knowledge dissemination and benchmarking on the performance of institutions (public institutions and other organisations that supply some kind of public services). 2. With respect to indicators in the Public Sector Innovation Scoreboard, there must be analysed in detail: 3. • their relevance and possible use for assessing the impact of Commitment 27. • whether it is possible to use this set of indicators for a cross country analysis in order to identify the factors responsible for the improvement in the scores of the selected countries. A detailed qualitative analysis within case studies will: • shed light on innovation processes in public sector organisations • show how benchmarking (in this case the PSIS) can help governments implement innovations • provide a descriptive analysis with contextual information which will complement the quantitative data • be used to verify the causal relationships between knowledge dissemination and/or benchmarking and the innovative performance of institutions