Title: California and San Diego The Tipping Point
1(No Transcript)
2Overview
- Partnership for the Global Economy
- If San Diego were a country
- Clusters of opportunity
- Clusters of convergence
- Evolution of our high-tech industries
- Why San Diego?
3Partnership for the Global Economy
4- San Diego is participating in a new global
innovation economy - San Diegos global reach has grown substantially
over the last decade. - Share of global talent pool has increased
- Share of global investment capital has increased
- San Diegos economic drivers are changing with
the convergence of key industries and
technologies.
5Global Collaboration
6Global Talent Flows
7Global Talent Flows
8Global Idea Flows
9Global Idea Flows
10Global Capital Flows
11SAN DIEGOS SIX CLUSTERS OF OPPORTUNITY
- Life Sciences (Pharmaceuticals, Medical Devices,
Biotechnology) - Health Services
- Information Services (IT, Telecommunications and
Publishing) - Advanced Manufacturing (Aerospace/Defense,
Recreational Goods) - Commercial and Infrastructure Construction
- Visitors and Regional Experience
- Role of Innovation and Professional Services
12Clusters of Opportunity
13Shared Characteristics
- All Clusters have been growing From 1995-2005,
all but one cluster had an average annual growth
rate (AAGR) of 3 to 6. - In all but one cluster, growth is exceeding US
growth. - In 2005, all clusters enjoyed higher real wages
than in 1995. - Five of the six clusters are more concentrated in
San Diego than in the United States - Each cluster offers career potential in
occupations of all wage levels with roughly 40
of jobs at the mid-wage level.
14Gross Regional Product
Billions
Source San Diego Institute for Policy Research.
e estimate f forecast.
15If San Diego County Were a Country
2006 GDP
Rank
Country
34. Portugal 192.6 Billion 35. Hong
Kong 189.8 Billion 36. Venezuela 181.9
Billion San Diego 155.4 Billion 37.
Malaysia 148.9 Billion 38. Chile 145.8 Billion
Source San Diego Institute for Policy Research
World Bank
16Clusters of Opportunity
Jobs
Cluster
Ave. Wage
Biotechnology 36,626 80,022 Telecommunications 25
,469 112,825 Defense Manufacturing 20,301 71,185
Computers/Electronics 15,369 78,826 Software 13,
963 82,011 Total High-Tech Clusters 111,728 n/a T
otal San Diego Co. Jobs 1,292,800 43,801
Source San Diego Association of Governments
Richs BioScience Directory California
Employment Development Dept.
17Economic Impact of Clusters
Billions
12.3
9.7
9.7
9.1
3.7
Source San Diego Association of Governments
18 Biogen Idec Gen-Probe Genentech Invitrogen Jo
hnson Johnson Pfizer
19 Cubic General Atomics Goodrich
Aerostructures Lockheed Martin General Dynamics
NASSCO SAIC Solar Turbines
20Telecom/IT L-3 Communications Motorola Nokia Q
ualcomm Inc. ViaSat Software Claritas ESET Int
uit Predicate Logic Electronics Cohu Sony Sun
Microsystems
21Evolution of a High-Tech Economy
- 1903 Scripps Institution of Oceanography
- 1917 Birthplace of naval aviation North Island
- 1934 Consolidated Aircraft
- 1940 Navy Radio Lab (now SPAWAR)
- 1955 General Atomics
- 1959 UCSD
Source Scripps Institution of Oceanography U.S.
Navy The Future Takes Wing SPAWAR General
Atomics UCSD
22Evolution of a High-Tech Economy
- 1962 Salk Institute for Biological Studies
- 1969 Linkabit, SAIC
- 1978 Hybritech
- 1985 Qualcomm Inc.
- 2000 Cal-(IT)2
- 2006 SD Consortium for Regenerative Medicine
- 2007 Emergence of a Cleantech cluster
Source Salk Institute SAIC Qualcomm UCSD
CONNECT San Diego Union-Tribune
23Today Clusters of Convergence
- Life Sciences/IT/Healthcare
- Healthcare/IT
- Security/Defense/Bio/IT
- Maritime
Source Salk Institute SAIC Qualcomm UCSD
CONNECT San Diego Union-Tribune
24Why San Diego?
- 500 biotech companies
- Wireless capital of the world
- World class research institutes, universities
- Science, talent, funding
- Legendary spirit of cooperation
- 200 spin-off companies
- Culture of serial entrepreneurism
25San Diego Works