Title: PANEL ON INDICATORS OF TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
1 PANEL ON INDICATORS OF TECHNOLOGY
DEVELOPMENT Geneva, 22-24 May 2002
The UNIDO Industrial Development Scoreboard
Presentation made by Frédéric Richard Director,
Strategic Research and Economics Branch
2OBJECTIVE
- To provide governments, industries and support
institutions with a simple analytical tool to
benchmark - The performances of their national industries
- A selected number of drivers of industrial and
technological capabilities
3Why benchmark?
- Valuable aid to policy analysis and design by
locating each country in global, regional and
competitive scene - Useful supplement to broad competitiveness
analysis by focusing on industry - Most developing countries lack comparative
information (even published data) - Analytical framework helps focus on some critical
variables
4Coverage of the Industrial Scoreboard
1985 (80 countries) 1998 (87 countries)
Ø Industrialised countries (22) Austria,
Australia, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Israel, Italy,
Japan, New Zealand, Netherlands, Norway,
Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United
Kingdom and United States. Ø Transition
economies (7) Albania, Czech Republic, Hungary,
Poland, Romania, Russian Federation and Slovenia.
Ø Sub-Saharan Africa (16) Cameroon, Central
African Republic (CAR), Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya,
Madagascar, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique,
Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda,
Zambia and Zimbabwe. Ø East Asia (9) China,
Hong Kong, Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia,
Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan Province and
Thailand. Ø South Asia (5) Bangladesh, India,
Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Ø Latin America
and the Caribbean (18) Argentina, Bolivia,
Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El
Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Jamaica, Mexico,
Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and
Venezuela. Ø Middle East and North Africa (10)
Algeria, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, Oman,
Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Turkey and Yemen.
5The Analytical framework
Productivity Growth
Competitive Industrial Performances
Industrial Capabilities
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7Manufacturing Value Added per capita (US)
6,000
5,000
1985
4,000
1998
3,000
2,000
1,000
0
World
Developed
Transition
Developing
Sub-Saharan
South Asia
Middle East
Latin America
East Asia
countries
economies
countries
Africa
North Africa
8Manufactured exports per capita (US)
9- Technological Classification of Industries
- Resource-based industries (prepared food, wood
products, petroleum rubber products) - Low technology industries (textiles, clothing,
leather, toys) - Medium technology industries (automotive parts,
chemicals, metal products and machinery,) - High technology industries (electronics,
pharmaceuticals, aerospace, precision
engineering,)
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11Share of Medium- and High Tech Exports in Total
Manufactured Exports ()
12How is the index constructed (1)?
- Unweighted average of the 4 index components.
This requires 2 steps - Step 1 Standardisation of the 4 index components
- Formulae
- Range between 0 and 1 (lowest and highest values
in sample)
13How is the index constructed (2)?
- Step 2 Construction of combined index
Industrial Complexity Upgrading
Industrial Capacity
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16Main Conclusions of the CIP Index
- Stability of national industrial performances
between 1985 1998 - However a few middle-income developing countries
have enhanced their performance China, Costa
Rica, Malaysia, Mexico, Philippines, Thailand - LDCs remain at the bottom of the index and the
gap between LDCs and other developing countries
has widened - 42 developing countries had a similar technology
structure in 1998 to that of 1985 - Only 16 developing countries have upgraded their
industrial structure toward technology-intensive
products - Industrial production and manufactured exports
within the developing world are highly
concentrated the top 5 countries account
respectively for 60 and 61. By contrast the
bottom 30 countries only account respectively for
2 and 1.
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26Highlights of the Scoreboard analysis
- The analysis of industrial performance and
drivers points to the following main messages - The correlation between the CIP index and the
drivers of industrial performance is positive and
significant - There is a surprising degree of consistency in
the relationship between the CIP index and the
drivers over time - Most drivers are also related to each of the
others, so that it makes sense to have more of
everything - There are many ways of combining the drivers,
however, and successful countries have used
varying strategies - The rankings of economies by the drivers are
stable over time, as would be expected for such
structural variables
27Highlights of the Scoreboard analysis(continued)
- Despite the general stability in rankings, some
countries changed their relative position
significantly - The impact of the drivers on industrial
performance also changes over time, with foreign
direct investment gaining in significance - Domestic technological effort, as measured by RD
financed by productive enterprises, is the most
consistent and significant of the drivers - Physical infrastructure is strongly associated
with industrial growth and technology upgrading - The drivers are unevenly distributed in the
developing world, and the distribution is growing
more uneven. East Asia dominates in almost every
variable, while Sub-Saharan Africa is
consistently the weakest.
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31http//www.unido.org
32For further information, please contact Mr. A.
Di Liscia, Assistant Director-General and
Director UNIDO Liaison Office Le Bocage 79-80,
Palais des Nations Geneva 10, 1211 Switzerland
Telephone 41 22 9173367, 9173364 Fax 41
22 9170059 E-mail a.diliscia_at_mbox.unicc.org M
r. F. Richard, Director, Strategic Research and
Economics Branch UNIDO P.O. Box 300 A-1400
Vienna, Austria Telephone 33 1 26026-3821, Fax
41 1 26026-6859 E-mail f.richard_at_unido.org