Title: National%20innovation%20systems
1National innovation systems
- Urmas Varblane
- University of Tartu
2Development and diffusion of the concept NIS
- Historical roots (Friedrich List,1841) -
national systems of production - a wide set of
national institutions including those engaged in
education and training as well as infrastructures
such as networks for the transport of people and
commodities - Freeman 1982 and Lundvall 1985 National
Innovation System - innovation process should be treated in a
systematic manner - need for systemic approach,
which integrates institutions to create, store,
and transfer the knowledge, skills and artefacts.
(OECD,1999 - understanding innovation as a complex interactive
learning process - learning is important gt key element in both the
dynamics of the system and as a key agent in
binding the whole system together. - comparative - could not be an ideal NIS, which
fits different nations with their specific
socio-economic, political and cultural
background.
3Theoretical perspective on innovation and
learning as socially embedded (Lundvall, 2003)
- Innovation is a process that is
- Cumulative
- Nonlinear
- Path dependent
- Context dependent
- Continuous
- Interactive Firms do seldom innovate alone
- Innovation and learning
- You learn from what you do
- Innovation as joint production of innovation and
competence - Learning is a socially embedded process social
capital is important
4Definitions of NIS
- Innovation System - a system for generating and
diffusing new technologies - every country has
such a system, even if it is weak or low in
capacity. - C. Freeman (1987, p. 1) the network of
institutions in the public and private sectors
whose activities and interactions
initiate,import, modify and diffuse new
technologies. - B.-A. Lundvall (1992, p. 12) narrow NIS
organisations and institutions involved in
searching and exploring such as RD
departments,technological institutes and
universities. - broader NIS includes all parts and aspects of
the economic structure and the institutional
set-up affecting learning as well as searching
and exploring the production system, the
marketing system and the system of finance
present themselves as sub-systems in which
learning takes place.
5Lundvall. 1992. National Systems of Innovation.
Towards a Theory of Innovation and Interactive
Learning London Pinter Publishers
- Assumption One / Knowledge as key resource and
learning as key process and knowledge differs
substantially from other economic resources - it is assumed that the most fundamental
resource in the modern economy is knowledge and,
accordingly, that the most important process is
learning. The fact that knowledge differs in
crucial respects from other resources in the
economy makes standard economics less relevant
(p. 1)
6Lundvall quote about the value of knowledge
- Knowledge does not decrease in value when used.
On the contrary, its use increases its value
i.e. knowledge is not scarce in the same sense as
other natural resources and technical artefacts.
Some elements of knowledge may be transferred,
easily, between economic agents while others are
tacit and embodies in individual, or collective,
agents. Knowledge is not easily transacted in
markets and not easily privately appropriated. In
spite of attempts to find institutional solutions
to the problem (patent laws, etc.) property
rights to knowledge are not easily defined. When
it comes to knowledge market failure is the rule
rather than the exception (p. 18)
7Lundvall. 1992. National Systems of Innovation.
Towards a Theory of Innovation and Interactive
Learning London Pinter Publishers
- Assumption Two / Learning as an interactive and
socially embedded process modern nation states
as a necessary prerequisite - it is assumed that learning is predominantly
an interactive and, therefore, a socially
embedded process which cannot be understood
without taking into consideration its
institutional and cultural context. Specifically,
it is assumed that the historical establishment
and development of the modern nation state was a
necessary prerequisite for the acceleration of
the process of learning (p. 1)
8National Systems, Globalization and
Regionalization (Lundvall, 1992)
- Why to focus on national systems in an era of
globalization? - Readers might ask, why we focus on the national
level, in an era where many analysts point to an
accelerating process of internationalisation and
globalisation, characterised by multinational
firms loosening their relations to their
home-country and entering into alliances with
foreign firms (p. 3) - The importance and viability of national
patterns - At the same time, a growing number of social
scientists often inspired by new sets of ideas
labeled flexible specialisation, networking
and post-Fordism have argued that regional
production systems, industrial districts and
technological districts are becoming increasingly
important. Some authors analyse these two
tendencies as interconnected and mutually
reinforcing. that globalisation, and
international specialisation have their roots in
the strengthening of specialised technological
districts and regional networks (p. 3)
9Lundvalls arguments in favour of using concept
of NIS
- 1) Communication also, or even primarily, based
upon tacit knowledge takes place within
national patterns - we believe that national systems still play
an important role in supporting and directing
processes of innovation and learning. The
uncertainties involved in innovation and the
importance of learning imply that the process
calls for a complex communication between the
parties involved. This will especially be the
case when the knowledge exchanged is tacit and
difficult to codify - 2)Globalization pushes strongest in science-based
and codified knowledge areas - On the other hand, it must be recognised that
important elements of the process of innovation
tend to become transnational and global rather
than national and here the trend will be most
important in science-based areas where the
communication is easier to formalise and codify.
Some of the big corporations are weakening their
ties to their home-base country and begin to
spread their innovative activities and to
source different national systems of
innovation
10Definitions of NIS
- The elements and relationships which interact in
the production, diffusion and use of new, and
economically useful, knowledge and are either
located within or rooted inside the borders of a
nation state (Lundvall, 1992 p.12) - A set of institutions whose interactions
determine the innovative performance of national
firms (Nelson, Rosenberg, 1993 p.5) - The national institutions, their incentive
structures and their competencies, that determine
the rate and direction of technological learning
(or the volume and composition of
change-generating activities) in a country
(Patel and Pavitt, 1994 p.12)
11Definitions of NIS
- That set of distinct institutions which jointly
and individually contribute to the development
and diffusion of new technologies and which
provides the framework within which governments
form and implement policies to influence the
innovation process. As such it is a system of
interconnected institutions to create, store and
transfer the knowledge, skills and artefacts
which define new technologies (Metcalfe,
1995p.462-463)
12Definitions of NIS
- C.Edquist (1997) - includes all important
economic, social, political, organizational,
institutional and other factors that influence
the development, diffusion and use of
innovations - Galli, Teubel (1997)- a historically grown
subsystem of the national economy in which
various organizations and institutions interact
and influence each other in the carrying out of
innovative activity. - NSI as the set of organizations, institutions,
and linkages for the generation,diffusion, and
application of scientific and technological
knowledge operating in a specific country .
13Systemic approach to innovation
- According to Ingelstam (2002)
- 1. a system consists of two kinds of
constituents there are firstly, some kinds of
components and secondly, there are relations
among them. The components and relations should
form a coherent whole (which has properties
different from the properties of the
constituents) - 2. the system has a function that is, it is
performing or achieving something - 3. it must be possible to discriminate between
the system and the rest of the world that is, it
must be possible to identify the boundaries of
the system. If we, for example, want to make
empirical studies of specific systems, we must,
of course, know their extension.
14Elements in the system of innovation
- Players or actors. Organizations firms
(normally considered to be the most important
organizations in Sis), universities, venture
capital organizations and public agencies
responsible for innovation policy etc. - Rules of the game. Institutions are sets of
common habits, norms, routines, established
practices, rules or laws that regulate the
relations and interactions between individuals,
groups and organizations, (Edquist Johnson,
1997).
15Edquist, 2001
16Nauwelaers, 2003
17National System of Innovation
18A generic national innovation system (Arnold, E.,
Kuhlman, S, 2001, RCN in the Norwegian Research
and Innovation System. Available at
www.technopolis-group.com)
19Systemic approach to innovation policy
(Romanainen, 2005)
Learning governance, strategic foresight,
evaluation, monitoring, assessment
innovation capabilities
Knowledge transfer awareness, co-operation,
mediation
complementary resources
complementary knowledge
Knowledge base education science RD
Market conditions customers competitors value-chai
ns
skilled labour knowledge ideas
sophisticated demand competition clustering
Innovation process
regulation services money
Framework conditions culture, social capital,
financial services, innovation services,
regulation
20Boundaries of innovation systems types of
systems
- Spatially, sectorally,functionallygt
- National Innovation Systems (Freeman, 1987
Lundvall, 1992 Nelson, 1993) - Regional Innovation Systems (Camagni, 1991 Cooke
et al., 1997 Braczyk et al., 1998 Cooke, 2001
and Asheim Isaksen, 2002) - Sectoral innovation systems ( Breschi Malerba,
1997, Malerba, 2004). - Technological innovation systems (Carlsson,
1995 Carlsson Stankiewicz, 1991)
21Social capital and the small country
paradox(slide from B.A.Lundvall)
- Small size (cf. The costs of respectively
production and reproduction of knowledge) and low
tech specialisation should be a serious handicap
for small countries and especially for Denmark
but small countries perform better than big ones
in the new economy why? - In the learning economy speedy adjustment,
learning and forgetting is rooted in social
relationships. Trust, loyalty and ease of
communication is easier to establish in
culturally homegeneous nations with shared
responsibility for the costs of change.
22Roots of the systemic approach to innovation
- evolutionary theory (Nelson Winter, 1982).
- firms are a bundle of different capabilities and
resources (Eisenhardt Martin, 2000 Grant,
1996 Spender, 1996) which they use to maximize
their profit. - knowledge is not only information, but also tacit
knowledge it can be both general and specific
and it is always costly. - Knowledge can be specific to the firm or to the
industry (Smith, 2000). - The innovation process is interactive within the
firms and among the different actors in the
innovation system.
23Activities in the system of innovation(Chaminade,
Edquist, 2005)
- function of SIs is to pursue innovation
processes to develop and diffuse innovations. - activities in SIs are those factors that
influence the development and diffusion of
innovations. Four approaches - innovation production process, looking at the
different activities needed to turn an idea into
a new product or process. Edquist, (2004),
Furman, Porter et al., (2002) - knowledge production process - how knowledge is
created, transferred and exploited (emphasis on
the channels and mechanisms for knowledge
distribution). (David Foray 1994 Johnson
Jacobsson, 2003 innovation systems as learning
systems (Lundvall, Johnson et al., 2002).
24Activities in the system of innovation(Chaminade,
Edquist, 2005)
- 3) organizational performance - organizations as
the starting point, identifying the activities of
the different organizations that have an impact
in the innovation system (Borrás,2004). - 4) innovation policy as a focal point gt what
activities (and organizations) in the innovation
system can be stimulated by public intervention
(OECD and other international organizations) - criticism - it considers only those activities
that can be directly affected by public
intervention
25Chaminade, Edquist, 2005
- what is the division of labor between private and
public actors in the performance of each
activity. - This will provide policymakers with a new
perspective on - a) what role they can play in stimulating
different activities in the system of innovation
- b) once the complex division of labor between
public and private actors has been unfolded, what
could be the appropriate instruments to do this - c) how to identify future research needs.
26Activities in the system of innovationproposed
by Chaminade, Edquist, 2005
- Provision of knowledge inputs to the innovation
process - 1. Provision of RD - creating new knowledge,
primarily in engineering, medicine and the
natural sciences. - 2. Competence-building (provision of education
and training, creation of human capital,
production and reproduction of skills, individual
learning) in the labor force to be used in
innovation and RD activities. - II. Provision of markets demand-side factors
- 3. Formation of new product markets.
- 4. Articulation of quality requirements
emanating from the demand side with regard to new
products
27Activities in the system of innovationproposed
by Chaminade, Edquist, 2005
- III. Provision of constituents for IS
- 5. Creating and changing organizations for the
development of new fields of innovation
(e.g.enhancing entrepreneurship to create new
firms and intrapreneurship to diversify existing
firms, creating new research organizations,
policy agencies, etc.) - 6. Provision (creation, change, abolition) of
institutions (e.g. IPR laws, tax laws,
environment and safety regulations, RD
investment routines, etc) - influencing
innovating organizations and innovation processes
by providing incentives or obstacles to
innovation. - 7. Networking via markets and other mechanisms,
incl. interactive learning between organizations
(potentially) involved in the innovation
processes. Integrating new knowledge elements
developed in different spheres of the SI and
coming from outside with elements already
available in the innovating firms.
28Activities in the system of innovationproposed
by Chaminade, Edquist, 2005
- IV. Support services for innovation firms
- 8. Incubating activities (e.g. providing access
to facilities, administrative support, etc. for
new innovating efforts). - 9. Financing of innovation processes and other
activities that can facilitate commercialization
of knowledge and its adoption. - 10. Provision of consultancy services of
relevance for innovation processes, for example,
technology transfer, commercial information and
legal advice.
29Innovation processes are path-dependent
- Evolutionary characteristics - we do not know
whether the potentially best or optimal path is
being exploited. - The system never achieves equilibrium, and the
notion of optimality is irrelevant in an
innovation context. We cannot specify an ideal or
optimal innovation system - Comparisons between an existing system and an
ideal or optimal system are not possible, instead
comparison with the other countries is available.
- Instead of market failure the term systemic
problems or systemic failures are used.
30Systemic problems mentioned in the literature
include (Smith, 2000 Woolthuis, Lankhuizen et
al., 2005)
- infrastructure provision and investment,
including the physical (IT, telecom, transport)
and scientific infrastructure (universities,
labs) - transition problems the difficulties that
might arise when firms and other actors face
technological problems or changes in the
prevailing technological paradigms that exceed
their current capabilities - lock-in problems, derived from the
socio-technological inertia, that might hamper
the emergence and dissemination of more efficient
technologies - hard and soft institutional problems, linked to
formal rules (regulations, laws) or nonformal
(such as social and political culture) - network problems, derived from linkages too
weak or too strong (blindness to what happens
outside the network) in the NIS - capability problems, linked to the transition
problems, referring to the limited capabilities
of firms, specially SMEs, their capacity to adopt
or produce new technologies over time.
31A system failure framework for innovation policy
design (Woolthuis,Lankthuizen, 2004)
32Why should governments intervene in favour of
(research) innovation ?
- Classic argument for research policy is a
market failure or public good issue. - But the rational for innovation policy is wider -
market failure assumes away deficiencies of real
companies - Capability failures in business sector
- managerial deficits, lack of technological
understanding - Failures in institutions
- other institutions in the national innovation
system universities, patent offices, financial
system, etc. - Network or system failures
- Lack of the interaction among actors in the
innovation system, etc. - Framework failures
- regulatory framework, health safety rules, etc.
As well as consumer demand, cultural and social
barriers to innovation.
33 The need to tailor packages of support to
different types of companies
34From science and technology policy to innovation
policy (NIFU-STEP, 2005)
- 1st generation Science and technology policy
- Focus on research and especially research in
universities and laboratories - Ministries of industry/economy (industry policy)
and research/education (science policy) - 2nd generation Innovation policy
- Focus on policy measures and institutions
targeting the innovative capabilities of firms - Ministries of industry/economy and
research/education - 3rd generation holistic innovation policy
- Focus on institutions and policy measures that
directly or indirectly influence the innovative
capabilities of firms - Most ministries
35A more complex understanding of innovation
- Innovation takes place in complex systems of
companies, knowledge institutions, financial
institutions and within a extensive regulatory,
social and cultural framework. - Innovation is based on complex learning processes
involving a large number of persons, all with
different educational backgrounds and
experiences. - Innovation thrives on spillovers and unexpected
combinations of persons, existing knowledge and
technologies.
NIFU-STEP, 2005
36A changing framework for innovation policy
National System of Innovation (Nauwelaers, 2003)
- Increased awareness of the role of innovation as
crucial ingredient for economic development - Interactive view of innovation innovation
differs from RD - System-based approach to innovation, emphasis on
learning and diffusion / absorption of knowledge - Mobility of tacit knowledge embedded in
humansbecomes a key performance factor - Glocalisation localised nature of (tacit)
knowledge spillovers - importance of global
connections
37The basis for systemic innovation policies
(NIFU-STEP, 2005)
Traditional industrial policies Modern innovation policies
Knowledge as a free commodity Competence building as learning processes
Focus on research Including a broad set of innovation activities (incl. development, incremental improvements, design, branding, marketing)
Focus on high tech companies Including low tech companies and services
Focus on RD institutions Company centred
Focus on knowledge diffusion Focus on absorptive capacities and networking
38Policies for innovation systems (Nauwelaers, 2008)
- Objective of policy intervention from optimal
allocation of resources, towards ensuring the
overall coherence of the system and improving its
evolution capacity. - Instruments targets free flow of knowledge in
the system, addressing lock-in situations,
favouring networking between innovation actors,
etc. - Justified by systemic failures arguments.
- Systemic policy instruments are gaining ground
(Kuhlmann and Smits 2004) - oriented towards the evolution of the innovation
system - preventing lock-ins
- building of spaces for interactions between the
actors - support to creativity
39Policies for innovation systems
- From stocks to flows as main focus of policy
attention - Flows in the system need to be addressed in
priority - From raising resources towards promoting
change - Performance is affected by learning abilities of
firms and others - From best practice towards context-specific
solutions - Policies should be fine-tuned to specific system
failures - From standard policy-making towards policy
learning process - There is a need for more strategic intelligence
in policy-making - Policies for activating knowledge
40Policies for innovation systems (Nauwelaers,
2003)
- From picking-the-winners towards
addressing-weakest - System performance is mainly determined by the
weakest node -
- From stocks to flows as main focus of policy
attention - Flows in the system need to be addressed in
priority - From raising resources towards promoting
change - Performance is affected by learning abilities of
firms and others - From best practice towards context-specific
solutions - Policies should be fine-tuned to specific system
failures - From standard policy-making towards policy
learning process - There is a need for more strategic intelligence
in policy-making
41Taxonomy of Innovation Policies(Georghiou, 2003,
2006)
42Demand-side measures
Source Georghiou, L. et. al. (2003) Raising RD
intensity. Improving the Effectivenss of Public
Support Meachanismss for Private Sector Research
and Development Direct Measures Brussels.
43A Simple Taxonomy of Science, Technology and
Innovation Policies
The Impact of RTD on Competitiveness and
Employment (IRCE), EC, 2003
44Policy Conclusions
- Effectiveness of innovation systems depends on
balanced combination of 3 capacities - creation of knowledge
- diffusion of knowledge
- absorption of knowledge
- Governments role shifts from investor to
facilitator - promotion of public/private
partnerships and interface management - Growing importance of framework conditions
- entrepreneurship
- competition rules
- labour market conditions
- social capital, ...
45Policy Conclusions
- Danger of fragmentation of innovation policy
need for intra-government policy coordination - Increasing role of regions for innovation need
for vertical policy coordination - More efficiency through Policy packages rather
than isolated instruments - Need for more policy intelligence
- monitoring and evaluation of policies
- sound analyses of innovation systems
- intelligent benchmarking practices
- long term views
- inclusive policy design processes
46Main developments in ourunderstanding of
innovation
- From individual entrepreneur to corporate
innovator - From laissez faire to government programmes
- From single division to multidivisional efforts
- From science push to demand pull?
- From single factor to multi-factor explanations
of innovation - From static to dynamic model of innovation
- From linear model to interactive chain-link
model - From one innovation process to several
sectoral-specific types
47Main developments in ourunderstanding of
innovation
- From neo-classical to evolutionary economics
- From optimising firm to resourcebased view of the
firm - From individual actors to systems of innovation
- From market failure to system failure
- From one to two faces of RD
- From single-technology to multitechnology firms
- From closed to open innovation
- From national to multi-level systems of
innovation - From RD management to innovation leadership
48External influence
External influence
External influence
External influence
RD domain public and private RD performers,
e.g. universities, research institutes,
government labs, high tech SMEs, large firms etc.
Other key domains e.g. private sector firms
(Innovation domain) financial institutions
(Finance domain) educational establishments
(Human Capital domain)
Source Policy mix project, European Commission.
http//rid.intrasoft-intl.com/PolicyMix/index.cfm