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Innovation Systems in Latecomer Development

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Innovation Systems in Latecomer Development Banji Oyelaran-Oyeyinka Professorial Fellow, United Nations University-Merit, Director, UN-HABITAT Emerging Economy ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Innovation Systems in Latecomer Development


1
Innovation Systems in Latecomer Development
  • Banji Oyelaran-Oyeyinka
  • Professorial Fellow, United Nations
    University-Merit, Director, UN-HABITAT
  • Emerging Economy Perspectives and Priorities in a
    Multi-Polar World November 2011

2
CONTENT
  • What is Development in the context of Innovation
    studies?
  • How do we view development in light of Innovation
    and Learning Studies
  • What have we learnt in this Dialogue and the
    extant Framework?
  • On the Role of Policy and Institutions for
    Innovation
  • Thoughts on Future

3
How Has Development been interpreted?
  • What are key issues emerging from the more than
    five decades of learning, theorizing and
    experimentation?
  • They are complex issues that can be classified
    into a number of stylized facts.
  • How do we understand lessons from the Dialogues?

4
  • Three stylized categories
  • Underdevelopment has a single cause
  • These causes have evolved over time and include
    the following
  • Shortage of physical and financial capital. The
    debate conceptualized economic development as a
    process requiring complex shifting of factors of
    production from low-productivity, traditional
    sectors plagued with diminishing returns to the
    more productive industrial sector characterized
    by increasing returns.

5
  • The high end is an economy with high levels of
    human capital and knowledge with an economy
    corresponding to increasing returns to scale
    and corresponding path is a high-factor-productivi
    ty, high growth and high levels of per capital
    income.
  • Ineffective government
  • Recently governments matter (Chang, 2001
    Stiglitz, 2001) and that the role of the state
    must be at center stage (Stein, 2001)

6
What we Know from Development and Innovation
Studies
  • The issues pivotal to the new development
    framework are
  • 1. Development is a non-linear, non-sequential
    and complex process Innovation is a non-linear,
    non-sequential and complex process
  • Example East Asian firms reversed the sequence
    of innovation cycle
  • 2. Development paths are differentiated and
    non-unique Innovation trajectory is equally
    differentiated.
  • Examples Foreign owned Taiwan small firms,
    locally-owned Malaysia. Large MNCs,
    foreign-owned China a new set of institutions
    and organizational forms. India complex
    sectorally-diverse modes (BPO success)

7
  • 3. Development is path dependent Innovation is
    path dependent.
  • Both shaped by initial conditions which affect
    subsequent paths of the process.
  • Examples Chinas dominance of computer hardware
    not a sudden success Indias success in software
    rooted in long years of building engineering and
    science human capital
  • 4. Development paths are not fixed Innovation
    paths are not set in unalterable contours
  • Both are subject to change through policy and
    institutional changes.
  • 5. Development process is shaped by the state
    Innovation is shaped by state action.

8
What is New in the New Development Framework?
  • The new makes a decisive shift in focus and
    content of the factors explaining economic
    growth.
  • 1. That development is not only about capital
    accumulation neither is it just about more human
    capital, important as these elements are.
  • 2 Eliminating big government and simply
    correcting for price distortions resulting from
    state action has equally not solved the problem
    of development.

9
  • Development is a long process of organizational
    change that takes as starting point five
    fundamentals, namely, financing, technology,
    institutions, human capital and policies.
  • The role of institutions are critical, that
    history matters, and that wealth distribution
    is a spur to sustained economic growth.

10
  • 5. Distributional inequalities perpetuate
    individual and productive structures from one
    generation to another. For instance an economy
    stuck in a low equilibrium production system will
    only be capable of supporting an incentive,
    contract and outcomes reflective of the kind of
    economic system.

11
STI What Differentiates Countries
  • Pattern of RD and Wealth Creation RD spending
    is highly correlated with the wealth of nations
    the highest spending is found within the OECD
    countries although a number of Asian countries
    are beginning to spend substantial amounts on
    RD

12
STI What Differentiates Countries
  • Pattern of Sectoral Specialization Countries
    specializing in so called high-tech goods and
    services tend to invest proportionally heavily in
    RD activities.
  •  
  • Pattern Public-Private of RD Spending Private
    firms in high income countries are the dominant
    RD players

13
What separates Countries
  • Pattern of Basic Research Investment Spending on
    basic research is also concentrated in high
    income countries with the sort of incentive
    structure and institutions that promote advance
    scientific knowledge
  • Differential Investment in Skills Acquisition
    There is a significant difference in the quality
    of skills and knowledge of scientists between
    developing and developed countries.

14
What separates Countries
  • Identify Key Drivers of Innovation Success
    Innovation capacity building effort in latecomer
    countries must seek context-specific Policies and
    Institutional solutions.

15
How will Institutions and Policies solve the
Development Problem?
  • In addition to what we do we need to include
  • How technology, Institutions and Innovation
    increase living standards and do we reflect these
    in standards of health and literacy.
  • The goal will be to eliminate poverty and
    inequalities as has been done at least in part by
    most industrial societies.

16
  • We need explicit formulation to include
    sustainable environment and all inclusive
    societal transformation.
  • We have pointed out differences in Systems of
    Innovation, Now we need to explain them and finds
    way to articulate different systems in emerging
    economies.
  • We need to help build Policy and Institutional
    Capacity to build Innovation Capacity

17
What innovation is
  • Much of Innovation in a developing context
    includes continuous improvement in product design
    and quality.
  • Changes in organization and management routines,
    creativity in marketing and modifications to
    production processes that bring costs down.
  • Increase efficiency and environmental
    sustainability.
  • The ability to manage a portfolio of
    partnerships, to form linkages and to learn
    through them.

18
Innovation Policy
  • The focus of Innovation Policy is on the
    interaction between system actors and their
    embeddedness in an institutional and policy
    context that influences their innovative
    behaviour and performance.
  • Coordinating these different actors e.g. agencies
    of government is difficult, complex and
    undermined by vested interests.

19
Innovation missing Links
  • The innovation system approach considers the
    demand-side. Demand flows amongst others signal
    the shape and focus of research, and the decision
    as to which technologies from among the range of
    the possible will be developed and the speed of
    diffusion.
  • Demand is not articulated at arms length through
    the market, but may take place through a variety
    of non-market mediated collaborative
    relationships between individual users and
    producers of innovation (Lundvall 1988, 35).
  • In broader systems terms demand may be
    intermediated by policies.
  • Conventional ST policy in poor countries has
    only come to terms with this reality.

20
Innovation Policy
  • Government Innovation policy in industrial
    countries usually result in actions in three
    broad dimensions
  • Supply conditions which involve the provision of
    financial and human capital,
  • Macroeconomic conditions which include
    competition, taxation and legal framework to
    allow for innovation activities to thrive
  • Demand conditions which include procurement and
    purchases by central and local governments.

21
Elements of IP
  • Supply Side (a) Support for knowledge
    infrastructure particularly RD in public and
    private domains,
  • promote research and professional associations,
    use of competitive research grants
  • (b) general and technical education, support
    university research, apprenticeship programmes.
  • (c) Information networks, library and database
    services.

22
Elements of IP..
  • Macroeconomic Conditions
  • Loans, subsidies to private provision of
    innovation, financial services, export credits
  • (ii) taxation company, personal, indirect and
    payroll taxation and tax allowances
  • Legal and Regulatory measures patents, health
    and environmental regulations, monopoly
    regulations and competition policy.

23
Elements of IP.
  • Demand Conditions (i) Procurement policy
    central and municipal government purchases and
    contracts, RD contracts, purchases
  • (ii) Commercial instruments trade agreements,
    tariffs, currency regulation.

24
THOUGHTS ON STIPS
  • INNOVATION
  • DEVELOPMENT
  • POINTS FOR DISCUSSION
  • POINTS FOR DISCUSSION

25
END
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