Title: Role of government in promoting technology development
1Role of government in promoting technology
development
- Sanjaya Lall
- Oxford University
- sanjaya.lall_at_economics.ox.ac.uk
2Why do developing countries need government
policy for technology development ?
- Usual case for technology policy in economics is
to remedy market failures due to externalities
(under-investment in RD), public goods (basic
research, standards), information and scale
problems (SME support) - This requires generic market friendly policies
- This is useful but inadequate for developing
countries selective policies are also required
to overcome problems of multiple growth paths - Choosing feasible path requires vision
- Implementing it needs government capabilities
3Technology market failures in developing
countries is due to tacitness of knowledge
- Latecomers cannot import use existing
technology efficiently by simply opening up to
technology inflows - Tacit nature of technology means local learning
is essential, and this is not trivial process - Learning faces market failures at 3 levels
- In-firm mastery cost, uncertainty, duration,
lack of information and unpredictability (infant
industry) - Inter-firm interaction and externalities
coordination and collective action - Deficient factor markets and institutions
coordination and development of basic endowments
4Learning is cumulative and path-dependent
- Each country has a unique learning path, with
complex economic and social interactions,
feedback and disturbances - Technology literature uses national innovation
system, NIS, to capture individual structural
(systemic) features of each country - NIS is mainly applied to industrial countries,
but it applies equally to developing countries - National system are difficult but not impossible
to change need country specific constantly
evolving policies
5Features of ideal technology policy
This may mean more openness but
not necessarily non-selective (neoliberal)
policies on trade, FDI, skills RD or finance
- Use globalization effectively
- Access new technologies promptly
- Attract other mobile resources
- Enter integrated production systems
- Link local value chains to global chains
- Upgrade technologies and functions in value
chains - Build local capabilities to exploit globalization
- Attract high value mobile resources
- Build domestic skills technological
capabilities to handle dynamic activities and
technologies - Develop strong local clusters capable of
competing in global value chains
6There are important choices on mode of accessing
foreign technology over time...
- Heavy dependence on internalised modes (FDI)
provides rapid and efficient access to operating
know-how, skills and global markets - But it may not lead to upgrading of functions
beyond those based on existing skills - And it may not lead to the rapid development of
innovative capabilities - To build innovative capabilities, it is necessary
to - Either restrict FDI and promote local firms and
RD - Or to induce MNCs to deepen technological
activity, by incentives, skill development and
RD capabilities
7Why are the policies of Asian Tigers of interest?
- At the start of the current era of economic
development (post II World War) East Asia was
much poorer than Latin America, with a less
developed industrial sector - Many Asian countries were also resource rich
- Most also embarked on import-substituting
industrialization policies - They had better macro management but more
political strife, wars, ethnic problems and so on - But they were far more successful in sustaining
high growth than Latin America
8Take regional MVA in developing world
9Technology strategies in the East Asian Tigers
- There was no Asian model given export
orientation, each had own strategic vision - Each vision entailed different mixes of
selective and functional (tactical) interventions - Differences in strategy were in fact more
important than differences in tactics - These led to striking differences in industrial
and technological structures - Leaders are mature Tigers. New Tigers are in a
very different ball-park, with low innovative
capabilities and uncertain strategy
10Three technological strategies in export-oriented
Tigers
- Autonomous based on domestic firms, with high
local content, minimal reliance on FDI, heavy
emphasis on skill building and RD. Pervasive use
of industrial policy - Directed FDI reliance on MNCs, but with stress
on moving into high value activities, with
significant use of selective policy - FDI dependent but passive success largely due to
welcoming policies, stable macro environment, low
wages, disciplined semi-skilled labour and good
luck/location
11Share of MNCs in exports
India
Korea
Taiwan
China
Indonesia
Philippines
Malaysia
Singapore
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
12Enterprise financed RD, recent ( GDP)
13High technology exports and RD
14Skill creation tertiary enrolments in technical
subjects as population
15Strategic differences cluster analysis of 1995
RCAs in high-tech exports, with RD and FDI
16Now let us consider country strategies for
industrial technology development...
17Korean strategy Interventionist, nationalistic,
strategic and high-tech
- Industrial policy dominant - strong, clear
leadership commitment to competitiveness - Import protection high, prolonged but selective
- Offset by strongly export-orientation, with
push not pull detailed targeting and
pressures - Chaebol spearheaded export, technology drive
- Inward FDI tightly restricted -- until financial
crisis. Outward FDI promoted - Heavy investments in human capital
- Directed and subsidised credit.
- Support for SME RD 2,278 units by 1997
18Korea financing RD
- Subsidies
- Designated RD Program funded 50 of RD for
large, 80 for SMEs, in important new
technologies. 2 billion invested 1982-93, 58
from government - National Research Projects provided up to 67 of
costs for selected RD. 1987-93 1.1b. total,
41 subsidy - Highly Advanced National Project started 1992
for very hi-tech RD 11 projects, 350 m.
subsidy - Loans
- Three funds with low interest rates, 1.2b. lent
till 1994 - VC industry, 58 companies, 3.5 b. disbursed
1990-94 - Banks with special technology windows. KDB
provided 3.4 b. during 90-94 - Guarantees for technology loans to SMEs 8b.
1990-94
19Taiwan Building high-tech SMEs
- Selective protection, subsidised and directed
credit. - Strategic technology targeting
- Human resources education and training
- Technology promoted by
- FDI targeting and local content/diffusion
- Superlative extension services subsidised
training, finance, technology and marketing - Strong public RD, incentives for contract RD,
venture capital, public RD spin-offs - Government orchestration of technology
import, adaptation, diffusion and innovation - Science parks and technology clusters
20- Linking, leveraging and learning in Taiwan
- Innovation consortia as leveraging tool
- IBM unveiled its new PowerPC microprocessor, a
product made by IBM, Motorola and Apple, in New
York in June 1995. It was followed one day later
by the unveiling in Taipei of PowerPC based
products by a group of 30 firms from Taiwan. - The Taiwanese firms had not done this on their
own. They were part of an innovation alliance,
the Taiwan New PC Consortium formed by a
government research institution, the Computing
and Communications Laboratory (CCL), set up in
1993 to bring together firms from all parts of
the IT industry in Taiwan. Its purpose was to
transfer, master and diffuse the new PowerPC
technology over the whole range of products from
PCs and peripherals to software and multimedia
applications as well as to semiconductor
manufacturers. The firms involved were relatively
small by international standards, and CCL brought
them together and negotiated on their behalf with
IBM and Motorola. - John Mathews
21(No Transcript)
22Singapore Using MNCs
- Dynamic comparative advantage by design
- From labour to capital intensive, then to
technology intensive and finally to innovation
itself - Growth of local technopreneurs based on
innovation - Latest industrial strategy is biotech and
bio-medicine - How did Singapore use MNCs?
- Targeting by efficient, honest and competent
agency (EDB) with power to coordinate implement
changes - Public sector played catalytic role, leading
private sector and MNCs, recently in RD by
setting up laboratories - Superb infrastructure, financed by highest
savings rate - MNCs participated directly in policy making
process - Upgrading education industrial skills (best
workforce in world) and importing high level
manpower
23Singapores skill system ...
- School leavers given pre-employment industrial
training of high quality - Tertiary system tightly regulated and guided, but
with ample financing and closely linked to
industry - Ample, varied industrial training courses, some
run by MNCs, some jointly with foreign
governments - Skill Development Fund funds full cost of
training by SMEs - Large firms are penalised for low-skill
employment and lack of training, and subsidised
for providing training - Funding for foreign trainers
- Liberal entry for skilled expatriates
24Hong Kong Nearly Laissez Faire
- Interventions for SME upgrading and export
marketing land subsidies for manufacturing - Unique initial advantages Hongs, entrepôt
experience, financial and physical
infrastructure, influx of skills from Mainland
China - High initial export growth, but lack of deepening
forced industry to relocate - Manufacturing and export growth now negative
only Asian Tiger to go into industrial decline - Some late attempts at technology promotion
- Growth based on servicing China -- but Shanghai
taking over important functions - Few lessons for other countries in technology
policy
25New Tigers Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and the
Philippines
- Weak skills and technology, but Philippines is
best in skills and Malaysia in RD - Domestic entrepreneurship (led by Chinese) is
weakest in Malaysia and strongest in Thailand - Active industrial policy in domestic oriented
sectors, but not advanced capabilities - High-tech strategies in Malaysia and Indonesia
not successful - Facing severe competitive threat from China
- Moving to FDI targeting, but lack authority of
IPA to design and implement strategy
26Conclusions
- Technology policy has taken very different forms
in Asian Tigers - Korea and Taiwan have strong domestic innovative
bases, with skills institutions to cope with
technical change and new competitive challenges
(though China will be major threat as it
upgrades) - Singapore is building technology base, but
remains vulnerable to external forces
27- New Tigers have to match domestic skills and
technological capabilities to high technology
export structures. If they cannot they will be
extremely vulnerable to new competition,
especially from China - Policies are converging Autonomous ones are now
more open and market oriented. Passive FDI
strategies are becoming more targeted. And all
countries are trying to build local capabilities,
enterprises and innovation systems. - But history matters -- there will not be rapid
convergence