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The Role of ICT Innovation and Technology in Productivity ABS NatStats Conference David Skellern Chief Executive Officer Farm water - what is the problem? • Seepage, evaporation and operational losses mean that less than 50% of water gets to the plant ~50% lost Part of a solution: Improved planning Integrated water resources mgmt Modernized infrastructure NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 2 Water Information Networks Channel System Commercial Regulator main Gate Repeater node Central node (data model) Water managed from reservoir to plant On farm experimental NICTA Copyright 2010 Farm nodes From imagination to impact 3 An example of what can be achieved WIN-1 innovations in sensing and real-time closedloop control on the farm have end-user benefits: • Dairy (irrigation for dairy pasture production) – 26% water savings per irrigation season (ML of water) – 27% improvement in water productivity (tonnes of dry matter / ML of water) – 38% improvement in gross margin (AU$ / hectare / year) – Lower peak demand on irrigation water distribution system • Horticulture (irrigation for ‘Pink Lady’ apple orchard) – 73% increase in gross returns (AU$ / hectare) – 74% increase in economic water productivity (AU$/ML of water) Source: VIC STI Program “Regional and economic benefits through smarter irrigation”, 2005 - 2008 NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 4 ICT influence on productivity & wellbeing ICT increases productivity and improves our wellbeing by • Creating new-to-world products, processes and services - often accompanied by new industries • Increasing the efficiency of personal, business and government transactions and processes • Triggering transformation of existing industries through enabling new business models NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 5 Lending Industry - Home Loan Process Mortgage broker Credit bureau Lender Loan customer Property Valuer Mortgage insurer State revenue office Settlement: Customer’s solicitor Seller’s solicitor NICTA Copyright 2010 Land titles office From imagination to impact 6 Going online has major benefits • Some highlights – Increased speed/efficiency of transaction processing Commonwealth Bank reports* that the time for approving a home loan extension has moved from 1422 days to 14-15 mins. – Increases participation through reduced complexity e-Application reached 89% over 3 years to 2008 Before: $1 billion spent on the loan approval process every year in Australia Now: • Savings* min $68 of $450 average loan approval cost • FY2009 total savings* in range $46-107 million * Australia’s Digital Economy: Future Directions © Commonwealth Bank of Australia and the Commonwealth of Australia, 2009 NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 7 The industry is transforming • Going online leads to Industry Structural Change • Growing trend in advanced lending process is outsourcing • Mortgage Broker aggregators • Property Valuers – scaling from a dozen in-house valuers to 100+ contract valuers using mobile apps & Web services remotely – readying for the first National Valuer Network (aggregator) NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 8 The Cost of Australia’s ICT Trade Deficit NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 9 OECD findings on R&D and Productivity • Strong relationship between R&D and productivity (16 countries, ~20 yrs)* – 1% increase in business R&D corresponds to 0.13% increase in productivity – 1% increase in public R&D corresponds to 0.17% increase in productivity (av increase in MFP over study period = 0.8%) • Australian relationship # – 1% increase in business R&D corresponds to a 0.11% increase in productivity – 1% increase in public R&D corresponds to a 0.28% increase in productivity *Gullec & Van Pottelsberghe, From R&D to productivity growth: Do the Institutional Settings and Source of Funds Matter?, OECD 2001 # Sources of Knowledge and Productivity: How Robust is the Relationship, OECD 2006 NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 10 Australian investment in R&D (2006/07) • Australia R&D expenditure: ~$21 B; 2.01% of GDP – – – – OECD average 2.26% of GDP (Australian gap ~$2.6B) EU target 3% of GDP by 2010, likely to achieve 2.6% Many countries invest over 3% (eg Sweden, Japan,…) BERD: 59%, GOVERD: 14.5%, HERD: 26.5% • Australian ICT R&D expenditure: ~$2.3B (~11%) – BERD: 84%, GOVERD: 5%, HERD: 11% (EU >20%) • We’re under-investing in ICT R&D BERD: Business Expenditure on R&D GOVERD: Government Expenditure on R&D HERD: Higher education Expenditure on R&D NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 11 Collaboration NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 12 Collaboration - Firms Firms collaborating on innovation activities by size, 2004-06 Turkey United Kingdom Australia (2006-07) Italy New Zealand (2006-07) Norway Slovak Republic Spain Germany Luxembourg Portugal Ireland Netherlands Large firms Poland Czech Republic France Sweden Greece Estonia Austria Belgium Slovenia Finland 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Denmark SMEs Hungary % OECD Science, Technology and Industry Scoreboard 2009 - OECD © 2009 NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 13 Thank you NICTA Copyright 2010 From imagination to impact 14