* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Closing Remarks
		                    
		                    
								Survey							
                            
		                
		                
                            
                            
								Document related concepts							
                        
                        
                    
						
						
							Transcript						
					
					Knowledge Economy Forum VIII Reforming Innovation Systems: Moving Beyond Lectures and Labs CLOSING REMARKS Fernando Montes-Negret World Bank Keeping Things in Perspective “… Capitalism has brought to consumers in developed economies vast riches unheard in previous centuries. The average North American, European, or Japanese consumer has a higher standard of living than a medieval king.” G.A. Akerloff & R. J. Shiller, Animal Spirits, 2009, p.171 Keeping Lisbon on the Agenda CRISIS AS A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY to accelerate structural changes and move to more sustainable growth    Prepare ECA countries for the upturn of the global business cycle Avoid short-term measures that affect long-term growth potential R&D Expenditures as a mechanism for enhancing competitiveness  Keep a long term view of priorities in crisis: Deal with the urgent, but do not forget the important -Shigeo Katsu, ECAVP, World Bank  Innovation in Traditional Indicators needed to capture dynamic reality in emerging countries -Dean Soumitra Dutta, INSEAD  Decentralization of Innovation requires: Coordination, Cooperation, Competition -Anneli Pauli, Deputy Director, DG Research, EC. Pro-cyclical R&D &Government Role DOUBLE-DIVIDEN ACTIONS can strengthen demand and growth: •Investments in infrastructure •Training and active labour market policies •Easing of entry restrictions to create new markets Early 1990s vs. Current Crisis FINLAND  Geographically-limited financial crisis, booming global demand  Strategy: Export-led recovery, re-industrialization  Policy: From macro to micro  Unutilized human capital 1/10 of R&D outsourced Basic knowledge jobs Technical Improving competitiveness      Global financial crisis, contracting global demand  Strategy: Domestic demand, boost competences, “sit out”  Policy: Micro-micro Weak entrepreneurial spirit  1/4 of R&D outsourced  Advanced knowledge jobs  Non-technical  Loosing ground Recipe for Growth: Talent, Finance for R&D KOREA Recipe for Growth: Talent, Finance for R&D KOREA Recipe for Growth: Talent, Finance for R&D KOREA Innovation and Technology Policy: Still A Priority ! CROATIA: Compound growth rates for Convergence  Even small acceleration on a sustainable basis accumulates into a large impact in living standards for future generation.  Linear extrapolation of the average growth rates indicates that Croatia’s per capita income in 50 years would correspond to 60 percent the U.S. level, an outcome reached by EU-27 countries in 2000.  Alternatively, Croatia could reach the same outcome in less than one-third of the time by raising its growth rates by 1-1.5 percentage points and sustaining such rates for a bit more than a decade. RDI Reform - 20 Years Too Late? Friendly Investment Climate Essential for RDI reform … but no excuse for delay !!! Audience Peer Reviews ECA KE III …  7 Reform Options: No One Size Fits All  Distinction Not Simple:  public and private goods  technology pull and market pull  RDIs as “helpers” and not drivers of innovation, survive by staying a step ahead of the local industry needs in Western Europe  Classification must be Differentiated based on Institution  RDIs  HEIs  Academies of Science  Private R&D firms  Looking Beyond Traditional Indicators for RDI Classification: patents, citations, and publications for benchmarking Audience Peer Reviews ECA KE III…  GOCO   Conceptually attractive, but faces implementation challenges Widely attacked as unrealistic because:          Case by case > All stakeholders to be engaged Competition for Non-Statutory Funding Progressive reduction of public sector funding (5-8 years) SHOCK THERAPY   Legal Barriers GOGO - OK if government ensures RDI autonomy – no political interference” GRADUALIST APPROACH   No managers to contract Agency risks Only solution for completely unproductive RDIs > closure Closures/ Liquidations politically and financially least feasible INSIDER PRIVATIZATION - Distributing shares to researchers – participants silent Just cut funding – is it enough? Audience Peer Reviews ECA KE III … RISKS / OPPORTUNITIES  Concerns of losing national R&D capacity  Anti-reform lobby from RDI Directors ►delays  RDI may “crowd out” innovative firm entry ►  RDI restructuring is essential to level private-public playing field FINAL REPORT SHOULD SPELL OUT  How to establish RDI mission / metrics / expectations / autonomy  How to develop new scientific fields / RDIs  Discuss “sweeteners” in greater detail:    grant schemes for collaborative research vs. tax incentives, or accelerated depreciation. Becoming a World Class University  World-class higher education institutions (HEI) are crucial for development, but we must consider that:  Not all HEIs need to be world-class; most HEIs can serve the purpose of addressing local skill gaps and serve as diffusion agents for knowledge and technology.  Not all countries can establish them  The Dangers of “Doing Well” > Complacency  Three necessary conditions:  Talent – Students / Teachers / Researchers  Financial resources  Autonomy and Good governance  Three potential paths:  De Novo (INSEAD, Olin);  Mergers; and Becoming a World Class University    Incentives and institutional change are critical for improved performance, but there are contextual limitations (U. of Zagreb) Sum Greater Than Parts. Creative collaboration opportunities (ParisTech) NUS Messages:  Universities to focus on solving tomorrow’s problems and creating tomorrow’s industries  Entrepreneurship > Teaching > Research  Attract Top Foreign Talent (Teachers & Students)  Licensing Necessary but not Sufficient  Adapt Best Practices to Domestic Conditions  Linkages with industry. Identifying, Producing, and Retaining Skills  The “human side” of innovation: strong correlation between skills and competitiveness.  Europe (EU-27) does well in the literacy and basic skills, less well in occupational skills, and not well in “talents for the Global Knowledge Economy”.  Investment in skills and human capital is critical in time of crisis to ensure robust post-crisis recovery: those countries that are ready, will experience robust recoveries.  The talent challenge: Interest in science education and vocation in technology is lower in industrialized countries, where technology is readily available. Teachers play a very significant role in reversing this trend. Identifying, Producing, and Retaining Skills Identifying, Producing, and Retaining Skills Key Global Challenges:  Importance of Long Term Planning  We live in Exponential Times  Managing Resource Demand Growth & Climate Change Global Trends in Education:  Value-based Educational Content  Restore Interest in Math, Science, and Technology  Build Teacher’s Societal Status, Image, and Rewards Quality Infrastructure Messages…       Compete on Quality, Not only on Price National Quality Infrastructure & Legal System Critical Important for Trade and Innovation Compliance with Rules of Importing Country on NonDiscriminatory basis Mutual Recognition for Trade Facilitation EU Standards as a Driver for Reform    Technical Regulations Inspections Accreditation Industry (Provider) State (Regulator) Driving force. Identification of needs. Weights in decision making. Sources of know-how. Usage of available people. Usage of available infrastructure. Development of Strategy Knowledge Economy Forum, VIII Fontainebleau, 1 May 2009 Public (Consumer) Dr. Hüseyin Uğur 20 Commercialization: From Labs to Markets        Importance of Networking for Universities Innovation Based on Research Universities Development of products done by industry University-Industry do not compete, but have different but complementary roles Sharing Risks & Rewards through “spin-offs” (university-Industry) Demand results from “honest brokers” (TTOs, commercialization contractors, …) Incubating the Incubators: ECA does not follow the “typical” linear model … Why? KEF IX Commercialization: Not All About Money          Entrepreneurial Ecosystems Promote Access and Diffusion Collaborative Research Social Networking for Commercialization SMEs and Serial Entrepreneurs as driving force Social Entrepreneurs and Philanthropists National Labs as Accelerators of Innovation (US Labs) Incentives not Mandates “Open Innovation” Model Protect Innovation Through the Crisis FINAL MESSAGE VERY WARM THANKS FOR YOUR ACTIVE PARTICIPATION See You Next Year ! Please Fill Out Your Evaluation Forms
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            