Title: Borderless Innovation Maintaining Competitiveness in the 21st Century
1Borderless InnovationMaintaining
Competitiveness in the 21st Century
2Introduction
- Kenn Morris
- Founder Director of Crossborder Business
Associates - California-based crossborder market research and
strategic consulting firm specializing in border
business and policy - Former Director of UCSD San Diego Dialogues
Crossborder Innovation Competitiveness
Initiative - Lead researcher and lead author of Dialogues
Borderless Innovation report
3Overview of Comments
- Context of Challenge Why Worry?
- Border NAFTA Outdated Paradigm
- Vision for Borderless Innovation in San
Diego-Baja California Region - Application of vision to Arizona-Mexico, border
states, and North America
421st Century Competitiveness Why Worry?
- World is Flat More than just China India
- China long term challenge
- Regional tech clusters Large number of existing
and emerging regions of technology
innovation across globe - Many regional economic development strategies not
prepared - An issue for US, Mexicoand North America
5Why Worry?
- Despite existing economic social linkages,
US-Mexico relationship stuck at border - Few cases of open, public dialogue about
weakening North American competitiveness - Fewer examples of policy leaders working to
foster new paradigm for North America - New vision beyond NAFTA needed
6A Regional Approach to Borderless Innovation
- San Diego Baja California region of
innovation, RD, technology manufacturing - Given economic social linkages, felt that a
latent opportunity to catalyze regional synergies
was possible - But no comparable data existed
- Crossborder Innovation Competitiveness
Initiative identify clusters of opportunity
in high value-added sectors in the binational
region - Focus on selected technology intensive clusters
biomedical devices, aerospace defense,
software, and others
7Cluster Findings
- Biomedical Devices
- Over 30,000 employed in Cluster (2003)
- San Diego 6,800
- Baja California 23,700
- BC highest number of FDA-certified BD companies
in Mexico (65) - Many Class 10,000 100,000 clean rooms
- 13 had HQ or operations in SD County
- Range of products heart pumps stents, lenses,
pacemakers, more
8Cluster Findings
- Aerospace Defense
- Over 23,000 employed in Cluster (2003)
- San Diego 18,300
- Baja California 4,800
- BC has highest concentration of aerospace
companies in Mexico - Mexico 9th largest aerospace supplier to US
- US-MX BASA agreement pending
9Binational ST Workforce
- Larger than expected, and growing
- Surveyed large regional universities
- Issuance of engineering and software of note
- More engineering degrees issued by major BC
universities than in SD (industrial) - UABC graduated more individuals with software
degrees than UCSD
10A New Regional Model for SD-BC
- Recommendations for San Diego-Baja California
- Crossborder Innovation Competitiveness Centers
(leverage existing organizations and
institutions) - Research and comparable ST data (foster
understanding) - Private investor networks (foster investing)
- Increased educational linkages (physical
online) and regional workforce training programs - Promote shared infrastructure investments
(energy, water, digital) - Increased security integration enforcement
11Realized Broader Implications
- Implications for all of California
- Biomedical devices Over 53,000 employed in CA
- Aerospace (Southern California)
- Automotive
- Software
- Semiconductors
- As well as the US-Mexico border states
12Implications Aerospace Defense
- AZ Large concentation of aerospace companies
(Raytheon, Honeywell, Boeing, etc.) - Aerospace education Embry-Riddle, U of A,
Maricopa Community Collegeand the ASU/ITESM
crossborder Masters degree in Aerospace Logistics - 35 of US aerospace employment in 4 US border
states - Within 1100 miles of Phoenix, most of aerospace
employment in the US and Mexico - Sept. 26th Mexican Aerospace Conferencein
Scottsdale
13Implications Silicon Border
- Technology park in Mexicali, goal of 1-2 Fab
facilities - If successfulpotential synergy with CA and AZ
semiconductor clusters (esp. Intel, Motorola, TI,
Freescale, etc.) - Not to mention concentration of semiconductor
related employment (160k) in 4 US border states
14A Model for the 21st Century
- North American Crossborder Innovation
Competitiveness Initiative? - Take concept beyond San Diego-Baja California
- Requires regional assessments in border states,
and analysis of city-city and region-region
clusters of innovation opportunity - Some hope
- North American Council on Competitiveness
- Emerging understanding of regional opportunities
and economic development agreements (AZ-Sonora,
maquiladora supplier promotion of TREO) - Opportunity for Third Nation to catalyze
technology manufacturing and competitiveness for
21st Century if we choose path of Borderless
Innovation
15Borderless Innovation Maintaining
Competitiveness in the 21st Century Thank You
GraciasKenn Morriskenn_at_crossborderbusiness.com
CrossborderBusiness.comCopies of Borderless
Innovation report www.sandiegodialogue.org