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Sweden’s Position in the Global Economy Swedish Globalization Forum May 2012 Christian Ketels Sweden’s Position in the Global Economy Scope of the Report • How is Sweden’s economic performance in a global context? • What are critical root causes for this performance that Swedish policy makers can affect? • Base report going wide, not deep • Provides synthesis, key data, and a framework • Identifies key challenges for Sweden going forward ; suggests directions for action The Conceptual Framework Prosperity Outcomes Performance Global Economic Activity MACRO Fundamentals Institutions Macroeconomic Policies MICRO Business Environment Conditions Company Operations and Strategy Long-Term Trends in Prosperity GDP per capita, US-$, PPP-adjusted 50,000 Countries that have surpassed Sweden in terms of prosperity: 45,000 1970s: Canada, Iceland, Norway 1980s: Austria, Denmark 1990s: Australia, Ireland 40,000 35,000 Sweden 30,000 United States 25,000 EU-15 20,000 15,000 Countries that Sweden has surpassed in terms of prosperity: 10,000 2000s: Germany, Denmark, Ireland, Canada, Iceland 5,000 0 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Source: Groningen Growth and Development Center, The Conference Board, 2006 Sweden Globalization Council 2007 04-17-07.ppt 4 © 2010 Labor Mobilization Hours worked per Capita Annual hours worked per Capita 840 820 800 780 760 Sweden 740 EU-27 720 OECD 700 680 660 640 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Source: Conference Board (2012) Swedish World Market Export Shares Swedish World Market Export Share, in % 2.00 Service exports 1.75 1.50 Total exports 1.25 Goods exports 1.00 0.75 0.50 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 Source: WTO (2011) 6 Copyright 2011 © Christian Ketels China India Lithuania Slovak Republic Romania Poland Latvia Czech Republic Bulgaria Russian Federation Brazil Chile Hungary Slovenia Australia Turkey Luxembourg Estonia South Korea Switzerland Iceland Germany Netherlands Austria Cyprus Ireland Belgium Norway New Zealand Spain Portugal Denmark Sweden Greece Italy Malta Israel Finland Mexico United States Japan France United Kingdom Canada Relative Change in World Export Market Share, 2000 – 2010 Change in Market Share 2010 to 2000 as % of 2000 Market Share 200% 150% 100% 50% 0% -50% Source: WTO (2011) 7 Copyright 2011 © Christian Ketels Sweden Export Portfolio By Cluster, 2000-2010 8% Change In Sweden’s Overall World Export Share: -0.02% Sweden’s world export market share, 2010 7% Forest Products 6% 5% 4% Business Services Furniture 3% Communications Services Communications Equipment Heavy Machinery Biopharmaceuticals 2% 1% Metals and Metal Manufacturing Aerospace Engines Sweden’s Average World Export Share: 1.2% Automotive Construction Services 0% -4.0% -2.0% -1.0% Transportation and Logistics Power and Power Generation Equipment Hospitality and Tourism Aerospace Vehicles and Defense -3.0% Fishing and Fishing Products Oil and Gas 0.0% 1.0% 2.0% 3.0% Change in Sweden’s world export market share, 2000 – 2010 Note: Bubble size is proportional to total export value in 2010 Source: Prof. Michael E. Porter, International Cluster Competitiveness Project, Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, Harvard Business School; Richard Bryden, Project Director. 8 Sweden Globalization Council 2007the 04-17-07.ppt © Underlying data drawn from UN Commodity Trade Statistics Database and the IMF BOP statistics. Change of Share of Chinese Imports Selected European Countries Share of Country in Chinese Imports, Level in 2000 = 1 2.00 Switzerland 1.50 Germany 1.00 Norway Denmark 0.50 Sweden Finland 0.00 2000 Source: UNCTAD (2011), author’s analysis. Sweden Globalization Council 2007 04-17-07.ppt 2005 9 2010 © Chinese Imports from Sweden Share by Product Group 2000 2010 Misc Primary produces, manuf., Chemicals, 3.5% 2.0% 3.9% Manufactur ed goods, 8.8% Primary produces, 9.0% Misc manuf., 9.0% Machinery, Transport Equip, 47.0% Chemicals, 13.0% Machinery, Transport Equip, 81.6% Source: UNCTAD (2011), author’s analysis. Sweden Globalization Council 2007 04-17-07.ppt Manufactur ed goods, 22.0% 10 © Swedish Exports by Firm Size Selected Markets SMEs share in total Swedish export value, 2007 All Swedish exports: + 6.9% 70% 60% Norway 50% Germany 40% 30% All Swedish exports: 31.7% BRIC 20% US 10% 0% 0% 2% 4% 6% 8% 10% Change in SMEs share in total Swedish exports, 2000 - 2007 Note: SMEs defined as <200 employees, bubble size proportional to total export value Source: Statistics Sweden, KTH (2012), author’s analysis Sweden Globalization Council 2007 04-17-07.ppt 11 © Sweden’s Foreign Direct Investment Position World market share 4% 3% Flows (3-year moving average) Outward FDI 2% Stocks Inward FDI 1% 0% 2000 2002 Source: UNCTAD (2011), author’s analysis. Sweden Globalization Council 2007 04-17-07.ppt 2004 2006 12 2008 2010 © The Shifting Face of Globalization Relative to GDP The Role of Trade and FDI in the Swedish Economy 175% 150% +62% +7.5% 125% 100% 75% Inward Stock Imports 50% 25% Outward Stock Exports 0% 2000 2010 TRADE Source: UNCTAD (2011), Statistics Sweden (2011), author’s analysis. 2000 2010 FDI Cluster Sector Employment over Time Share of Total Employment 50% Sweden 45% 40% 11 EU countries 35% 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 Source: European Cluster Observatory (2012), author’s analysis. Employment by Cluster Sweden, 2000-2008 3.00 Absolute Job Gains Absolute Job Losses Paper products Sweden’s EU employment share, 2008 2.50 Information Technology Automotive 2.00 Heavy Machinery Analytical Instruments Metal Manufacturing Telecom products Lightning and Electrical Products 1.50 Business Services Production Technology Medical Devices Construction Entertainment Products Transportation and Logistics 1.00 Oil and Gas Pharmaceuticals 0.50 Processed Food Farming and animal husbandry Aerospace 0.00 -1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0.0 Change in LQ (fixed country sample), 2000 - 2008 Sweden Globalization CouncilCluster 2007 04-17-07.ppt Source: European Observatory (2012), author’s analysis. 15 0.5 1.0 Total employees, 2008: © Competitiveness Profile of Sweden 2011 Micro Business Environment Quality Macro Company Sophistication Social Infrastructure and Pol. Institutions Context for Strategy and Rivalry Political Institutions Related and Supporting Industries Rule of Law Demand Conditions Human Development Factor Input Conditions Capital Comm. Admin. Innov. Macroeconomic Policy Global Rank <5 Significant advantage 5-8 Moderate advantage 9-11 Neutral 12-15 Moderate disadvantage >15 Significant disadvantage Logistic. Skills Source: Unpublished data from the Global Competitiveness Report (2011), author’s analysis. Doing Business in Sweden Source: World Bank (2012) Doing Business 2012 Rank Change in Rank vs. 2011 Getting Electricity 8 -2 Trading Across Borders 8 -1 Registering Property 19 -3 Resolving Insolvency 19 -1 Dealing with Construction Permits 23 No change Protecting Investors 29 -1 Starting a Business 46 -6 Getting Credit 48 -3 Paying Taxes 50 -3 Enforcing Contracts 54 -2 Innovative Output Selected OECD Countries, 1999 to 2009 Average U.S. utility patents per 1 million population, 2007-2009 300 Japan 250 United States Taiwan 200 Switzerland 150 Israel Finland South Korea Germany Canada 100 Sweden UK Denmark 50 France Italy 0 -5% Netherlands Austria Norway Belgium New Zealand Mexico -3% Hungary -1% 1% Australia Ireland Spain 3% 5% CAGR of US-registered patents, 1999 to 2009 7% 9% 10,000 patents (avg. 1999 – 2009) = Source: USPTO (2010), Groningen Growth and Development Centre, Total Economy Database (2010) 18 Copyright 2011 © Christian Ketels Innovation Performance Sweden’s Rank among European countries Enablers Human resources New doctorate graduates per 1000 population aged 25-34 Percentage population aged 3034 having completed tertiary education Percentage youth aged 20-24 having attained at least upper secondary level education Open, excellent and attractive research system International scientific copublications per million population Scientific publications among top 10% most cited publications worldwide Non-EU doctorate students as % of all doctorate students Firm Activities 1 Firm investments Business R&D expenditures (% of GDP) Non-R&D innovation expenditures (% of turnover) Outputs Innovators 1 4 Linkages & entrepreneurship SMEs innovating in-house (% of SMEs) Innovative SMEs collaborating with others (% of SMEs) Public-private co-publications per million population Finance and support Public R&D expenditures (% of GDP) 3 Intellectual assets PCT patents pplications per billion GDP PCT patent applications in societal challenges per billion GDP Community trademarks per billion GDP VC (% of GDP) 2 Community designs per billion GDP 6 8 Note: Coloring indicates relative strengths and weaknesses Source: Innovation Union Scoreboard (2012), author’s analysis. 19 9 SMEs introducing product or process innovations (% of SMEs) 16 18 5 9 SMEs introducing product or process innovations (% of SMEs) 8 Economic effects 6 Employment in knowledge intensive activities (% of workforce) 4 1 1 9 7 Medium-tech and high-tech exports (% of total exports) Knowledge-intensive services exports (% of total service exports) New-to-market and new-to-firm sales (% of turnover) Licence and patent revenues from abroad (% of GDP) 5 12 12 30 4 Copyright 2011 © Christian Ketels Learning Outcomes Across Countries 2009 Finland Proficiency Score, 2009 600 Germany SWEDEN Norway Reading 550 Denmark Math Science 500 450 400 350 300 Source: OECD, Pisa 2009 database 20 Copyright 2011 © Christian Ketels Key Issues Impact of Policy Reforms • Level of educational attainment is modest compared to international peers • Labor market reforms have had an impact but worked largely through increasing labor supply • Innovation systems remains highly ranked but structural challenges are growing Impact of Changes in the Global Economy • Smaller companies become increasingly important for exports and innovation. • Foreign markets are increasingly served through FDI • The majority of net job creation occurs in sectors that serve local markets 21 Copyright 2011 © Christian Ketels Action Areas Impact of Changes in the Global Economy Impact of Policy Reforms Integrate reform efforts across individual policy areas Realign policy tools with changing patterns of firm behavior 22 Position Sweden in the global economy Copyright 2011 © Christian Ketels Action Areas: Integrated Action Integrate reform efforts across individual policy areas • Current policy approach too often targeted on narrow problems Realign policy tools with changing patterns of firm behavior Position Sweden in the global economy – Lack of incentives to enter the labor market – Lack of competition in education system – Lack of incentives to commercialize research • While these problems are real and important, a step-change in outcomes will require a more systemic approach – Address supply (incentives, quality of education, relevance of science) – Address demand (skill demand, returns to education, returns to businessacademia collaboration – Address linkages (matching, information, collaboration platforms) 23 Copyright 2011 © Christian Ketels Action Areas: Policy Tools • Current policy approach is too often based on traditional economic structures Integrate reform efforts across individual policy areas Realign policy tools with changing patterns of firm behavior Position Sweden in the global economy – Internationalization seen as export promotion – Research collaboration seen as spin-offs or linkages to multinationals • While the policy tools applied in these areas are important, they are insufficiently aligned with the needs of the emerging economic structures – FDI (inward and outward) and exports are simultaneous elements of firms’ internationalization strategy – Growing role of SMEs in trade and innovation – Innovation is taking place in internationally connected regional clusters of research institutions and firms of different sizes 24 Copyright 2011 © Christian Ketels Action Areas: Global Positioning Integrate reform efforts across individual policy areas Realign policy tools with changing patterns of firm behavior Position Sweden in the global economy • Current policy approach is too oriented on doing what is good in general rather than on what benefits Sweden most in particular – Focus of policy reforms on weaknesses – Focus on cross-cutting dimensions • Positioning is not about picking winners, but about focusing policy on creating competitive advantages for the location – Specific business environment strengths – Specific clusters – Integrated policy packages in high-priority areas 25 Copyright 2011 © Christian Ketels