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Panel Discussion Abdelkader DJEFLAT The Maghtech Network Lab. CLERSE/CNRS University of Lille1- France Expectations of the session – Discuss appropriate definitions of innovation in the context of Africa – Gain and share experiences on issues of innovation – Understand what innovation is in the context of improving social economic development – Learn from the current trends on innovation thinking – insights from the field that are applicable to Tanzania/ Africa. – Understanding the importance of measuring innovation activities Distinct features of innovation in Africa Africa : a highly heterogenous continent But a trend seems to dominate Phase one Phase 2 Phase 3A sap Attempts to in dustrialise (Public sector) Rural & agricultural dominant economy Mineral resources Regression of industrial Reformes and privatisation Appropriate definition of innovation for Africa • The capacity to satisfy the changing needs of the economy ans society for inclusive development and competitiveness in the world market Is innovation low in Africa? Innovation is low using conventional indicators • • • R&D funded by companies in East Asia is 250 times more than in African countries (not including South Africa), 25 times more than in Latin America Innovation index 3.95, North Africa and the Middle ,East: 6.14, Latin America : 5.80, South Asia : 4.23, East Asia and the Pacific : 7.43, Europe and central Asia , 8.28 and America : 9.45 (WBI) Global Innovation Index 2011 class African in the last position with Algeria 125th position (out of 125) Yet innovation more important • Informal sector • Use of alternative protection (dominant family business) • Mistrust of institutions • Limited access to information • Economic reasosns Is innovation different in Africa Similarities differences • Many AFC aiming at Semiindustrialised, and or emergent) countries (catch up) • Promotion of exports of value added • Facing world competition and quality issues as central • Limits of competition on wage level • Need to reduce dependency on primary products • is not always driven by R&D : include other sources of knowledge. (learning by doing, using and interacting, indigenous, experience from informal economy and R&D. • is still highly dependant on foreign technology (collaboration, spillovers) • instability, the inequalities and the heterogeneities • Weak culture of innovation Specific to African environment • Inability of local institutions to interact, difficulty in building local knowledge through the tacit knowledge , • repetitive techniques of learning through imitation rather than innovation (Oyelaran-Oyeyinka, 2004). • Networks between industry and R&D tend to be absent (Wangwe, 2003). • High capacity of dis-accumulate through de-learning (Djeflat, boidin 2002) • lack of “an organic evolvement of a STI system Astrid Szog (2009) Salient features of IS • The difficulty of Innovation systems theory for system construction (Lundvall et al., 2002) • Built ex post and not emerging from learning • Weak and fragmented • non coordinated and mostly tacit • Often supply driven and not demand driven and top down dominance Different context • -Innovation for resources (mineral and non mineral resources) based economies • in a context of Rentier economies with strong vested interest in conservatism and protecting existing non innovative income generating • in a context where part of human capabilities are located outside through migration of SIC (scientific and intellectual capabilities)ie. an important diaspora. • in a context where a strong informal sector dominates and where dynamic learning occurs but also where knowledge can be destroyed: (informal or semi formal IS – linking formal to informal The African Science and Technology Indicators Initiative (ASTII) • The survey found that innovation in companies is driven by clients' and customers' ideas and collaboration, as well as the acquisition of new machinery and equipment • instead of coming from the ideas of public research institutions and universities, Which are the most important actors in African innovation systems? • The State a key actor in shaping innovation through • Key ministries (a lobby within government) • In Maghreb Ministry of industry and commerce (not the ministry of higher education • The private sector and entrepreneurs (Shumpeterian profile) • A decentralised key actors : farmers and paysants, universities , Chamber of commerce, professional bodies What sectors are more active in innovation activity in Tanzania/ Africa? Traditional sectors • Agro food (export requirements) • Mineral Emerging new sectors • Pharmaceuticals (export and domestic competitive pressure) • ICT • Nanotechnology Can innovation activities address and support inclusive development? • Innovative activities can reduce inequalities by stimulating growth • Give all strata of society the possibility to vreate income and self empoyment • Through enhancing informal sector activities and • Give creative women and youth to create wealth and income through knowledge Appropriate types of innovation in Africa What types of innovation are relevant for Tanzania considering level of development and productive structure of the economy? Main Differences Incremental vs. Radical Innovation • low uncertainty • high uncertainty • exploits existing technology • explores new technology • key players are cross-functional teams • key players are cross-functional individuals • business plan developed at the beginning • business plan evolves through discovery-based learning • process is formal • process is informal improvements in existing products/processes development of new products/processes Global Innovation outlook Two types of sectors Traditional sectors • Agricultural research (agro sector contributes more than 2/3 of GDP and accounts for almost 85% of the total exports) • Health sector • Natural resources • Industrial R&D (Small industrial sector : food processing, light consumer goods, mining (gold , natural gas) New sectors: 2025 development vision • Industry : fastest growing (agricultural processing, wine), diamond-, gold-, and iron mining, oil refining, wood products, salt, soda ash, cement, shoes, apparel and fertilizer productions Objective to become : a diversified and semiindustrialized economy with a modern rural sector and high productivity in agricultural production What type of innovation? Upgrade and reinforce • Incremental innovation • Product innovation • Use of traditional and modern technology Encourage basic innovation • Incremental product and process have limits • All kinds of innovation are necessary : organisational, marketing and management, financial • the global value chain is important as well as the accumulated experience. Is replication and copying desirable in an African context or should Africa design its own pathway to innovation? Copying desirable • Catch up context (windows opportunities & late comer advantage) • Emerging economies (shortcuts and leap frogging) • Global chain value strategy requires building on existing technologies (compete on global market) • Some generic technologies : ICT Copying not desirable • Specific problems and issues (agriculture, health, minerals etc. ) • a rich cultural and traditional heritage which risks being marginalised • No outstanding example of successful copying • Africa should find its own pathway to innovation Measuring innovative activities Do current existing indicators fully capture innovations taking place in Africa? • The dominant position of the Oslo manual in defining indicators to insure comparability at regional and international level • But Bogota manual shows the need to take into account the specific characteristics of innovation systems and firms (Largely unknown processes of innovation and technical change at firm level, unstructured IS , Embodied technology, minor incremental changes , importance of organisational change, • The UNU-Merit study Implications • Current indicators do not capture all the innovation taking place • indicators explaining ‘systemic failure’ • Technological learning pattern seems different • innovation systems of late-comer countries are fundamentally different from those of developed ones • Difficult to conduct Innovation surveys • Late-comers are “most sucessful” (East Asia) and “less successful” (Africa) What is the relationship between Science & Technology indicators, and Innovation indicators • Normally close relationship • In African countries De-linking between the two • Rising performances regarding research results et dismal innovation performances • Need to create innovation links through : innovation hubs, incubators, clusters, technopoles Building capabilities for innovation Should focus be on research capacities or innovation capabilities? • Both as certain sectors require research capacities: outlined earlier • But current problem is major innovation deficit through dismal share of exports oh high technology products • At firm level : both R&D and incremental technical changes are needed What inhibits the absorption and adaptation of technologies in Africa? • Lack of endogenous capabilities: the human element at the centre • Lack or weak policies and strategies with regards to adaptation and absorption • In some countries with rent surpluses : easy access to final goods and services • Competitive imported goods through infromal channels What is the role of higher education and research in adoptive and incremental type of innovation? • Higher education current role in incremental innovation is very weak if not absent • Coule contribute through developing more spirit of innovation, desire for change & entrepreneurship including • Innovative thinking be integrated to school system? • Need toreview syllabuses to integrate : new course on the management of innovation • Establish stronger and more permanent links with the productive sector (4% of SMEs have formal relations in NACs) What is the right balance between theoretical education and vocational training in emerging economies • Vocational training has suffered from neglect for many years • Need to put stronger emphasis both at secondary level and in hgher education : the experience of professional masters in France • Theoretical education is also a key in the new knowledge economy: higher scores in innovation are alos correlated with high scores in maths, Physics (TIMMS, Pisa etc.)were Africa is lagging How to analyze and stimulate the demand for knowledge in emerging economies? • Demand for knowledge is linked to a host of factors • Stimuleate demand for high knowledge contents goods and services • Enhance innovation in Marketing and management • Promote innovation drive in family businesses Introduction • Two decades of attempts to put up ,innovation policies gave very little results. • Investiment in R&D is only part of the story (doubled in some cases) • Some policies aimes to integrate many actors (state , entreprises, training sphere) • Some situations indicate true involvement of key actors • Only limited number of success stories Questions • Birth crisis and not growth crisis (Catch up) • Life cycle of NSI blocked at initial stage • Question : How to get out of this situation? How to get innovation take off the ground in African countries? Part I Empirical evidence for innovation take off difficulties Table 1: State of R&D in the world (2001) Source: Lall and Pietrobelli (2003) ; Note: NA : Not Available Countries and Regions Developed countries Number of Engineers involved in R&D 2 704 205 Total R&D (%GNP) Performance (%): Production sector Performance (%): Higher education 1.94 53.7 22.9 1 034 333 0.39 13.7 22.2 3 193 0.28 00 38.7 29 675 0.40 NA NA Latin America 107 508 0.45 18.2 23.4 (excluding ) 893 957 0.72 32.1 25.8 4 684 700 0.92 36.6 24.7 Developing Countries Sub-Saharan World R&D as a percentage of GDP in Algeria ( période 2006 – 2010) average 1999-2004 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 0,22 0,38 0,56 0,74 0,92 1 year R&D as % GDP Total 2006201 0 / Weak irregular and uncertain R&D result. absorptive capacity weak • Defined as a – complementary necessity to knowledge creation in relation to technologies acquired abroad (Mowery and Oxley, 1997; Kim, 1997), – as a prerequisite to the learning process at the firm level, which necessitates notable intangible investments (Cohen and Levinthal, 1989), and – as capacity to create new knowledge and to search and select the most appropriate technology (Narula, 2004). Difficult absorption by the research and innovation system 40 30 20 Financement prévu 10 Réalisé 03 20 02 20 01 20 00 20 99 0 19 Millards Dinars Schéma : Financement prévu par la loi 98 et budget effectivement consommé Registration in scientific disciplines in decline: market absorption of graduates Evolution des effectifs en science exactes et technologie : graduation 49 500 49 000 48 500 nombres 48 000 47 500 47 000 Série1 46 500 46 000 45 500 45 000 44 500 1 2 3 années: 2000/2004 4 Slow take off of NSI • incomplete, unstructured , poor in linkages(NARULA, 2004, DJEFLAT, 2004), • deficient in interractions between main componants (CASADELLA 2006) • Missing capabilities (JOHNSON, EDQUIST, & LUNDVALL, 2003). • non existant (AROCENA & SUTZ, 2003) The current national innovation system: excludes most key players Independant innovators Foreign firms active in the domestic market Valorisation agency ANVREDET Funding Agencies (FNR, ANDRS, ANDRU,…) I National Patent Office INAPI Policy-makers Universities Public Entreprises Private Entreprises Foreign Firms in arms’length situation (technological partners) Research Centres Professional Bodies Technical center Technical CETIM center CNTC NSI in France SNII Français:flux financiers Crédit Impôt Recherche Avance Remboursable Dotation fonctionnement Subvention Taxe Pouvoirs publics ADEME ANR Entreprises existantes AII-OSEO Régions CTI Associations Professionnelles Grands Organismes Universités Grandes Ecoles Start-up et filiales Pôles de compétitivité Centres Régionaux de transfert Characteristics of Innovation systems in the stage of take off C Characteristics of NSI prior to innovation take off. • R&D activities are not clearly defined and formally articulated within enterprise strategies (Arocena and Sutz, 1999; 2002). • vulnerable and unstable macroeconomic environment (Cassiolato and Lastres, 1999) • relational, normative and built ex post (Arocena and Sutz, 1999; 2002) • national system of inertia (Hobday 1995; Hobday et al, 2004). Specific to African environment • Inability of local institutions to interact, difficulty in building local knowledge through the tacit knowledge , repetitive techniques of learning through imitation rather than innovation (Oyelaran-Oyeyinka, 2004). • Networks between industry and R&D tend to be absent (Wangwe, 2003). • High capacity of dis-accumulate through delearning (Djeflat, boidin 2002) • Rent seeking positions Part III What should an NSI for take off (precatch-up) and to build it? Conditions to be fulfilled • more appropriate the take off stage • Capable of exercising a relatively strong push for an effective demand for R&D products and services to emerge; • could move the whole apparatus from take off to catch up at a latter period and make it sustainable. Driving engine • The guarantee to innovation effort : create opportunities to apply knowledge to local problem-solving • Public demand and public procurement • Technical centers • technopoles Steps in the construction of NSI in the take off stage Phases Step 1 Modes of construction Step 2 Improvement of National System of decentralised knowledge Construction of Step 3 Centralized improvement of knowledge Step 4 Take off Knowledge creation Création de création of new connaissances nouvelles through NSI in the broad knowledge and sense technology (sens strict) national system of inertia Caracteristics Perspective de nonsystème Policies utilisation des connaissances Competences (NSCC) locales et perspective d’amélioration des capacités d’apprentissage : Knowledge creation diffusion of foreign through NSI in the technology: R&D et other learning broad sense efforts . Etapes de décollage des SNI Phases Step 1 Modes de construction Politiques pre take off Caractéristiques Perspective de nonsystème Step 2 creation of learning capacities Decentralized Mode of capacity creation Stratégies bottom up et création d’espaces interractifs Step 3 creation of national capacity of absorption Système d’absorption Step 4 Construction of competencies and technical support to l’innovation Take off of innovation National System of Construction of Competencies (SNCC) Step 5 National diffusion des technologies étrangères : R&D et autres efforts d’apprentissage technologique. Finalisation du SNI création de nouvelles connaissances : activités intensives en R&D Empirical findings in the establishment of innovation systems in the Maghreb • Mostly centralized • Institutional set ups (Ministries, agencies commissions , think tank etc. and laws (ex: the 1998 law in Algeria) • Significant growth of Research funding . (doubled and troubles in last decade. • Définition of lists of priority areas • Incentive system (tax and non tax incentives) Partie V Decentralized modes of innovation : Industrial technical centres Modes décentralisés de décollage: les CTI Laboratoires de recherche Environnement National et international Organismes de Valorisation Centres Techniques Etudes collectives Industrie Etudes spécialisées Caractéristiques et nombre en Europe et au Maghreb Pays Number of CTI Date of création Financing Status 16 Number of employe es 2500 France 1948 54% public Loi spécifique Tunisia 8 455 1969 50% public Ets d’intérêt économique public Algeria 2 210 1990 Selffinancing SPA Morocc o 9 50 2005 40% public Association Performances des CTI français • Les CTI français : – 4500 collaborators, (50% d’ingineers and cadres, et 34% de technicians – Contribute to the R&D of 70 000 entreprises, 26 secteurs, (68% of SMEs with less than 50 employees), and 30% of entreprises having between 50 and 500 employees (2004) – All sectors involved : industrial goods , jewellery, wood and furniture etc. Intensive exchange with the academic world (research) – 200 thesis et 50 post-doctorants par an, – 220 partnership agreements with laboratories , – 34 000 service contracts per year , – 25 journals and magazines , – 300 study days and workshops, 30 000 stagiaires en formation métier. Could they be a mode of innovation take off • Prédominance of incrémental innovation. • Technology transfert as a main preoccupation . • Quality standard main preoccupation n • Good at information gathering and economic intelligence. • Training of competences in specific field a key component : learning and capability building Compétences Uniques • Un partenaire dans l’apprentissage ‘a learning partner’ pour les entreprises (projets en collaboration, R&D collectifs, programmes de recherche publique ). • Accroissement de la capacité d’absorption. • Role de lubrification et d’intermédiation entre (proximité simultanée entre enseignement supérieur). • Un entrepôt flexible de solutions R&D pour les PME. Conclusions