Title: Catching the Wave: Can we make it
1Catching the Wave Can we make it?
80 of technology is less than 10 years old
80 of people acquired their education more than
10 years ago Ms Marie Donnelly, European Union
- Some thoughts and observations on Australias
positioning as an innovation driven knowledge
economy
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7Its all about Engaging Industry in the
Translation of IP and RD into Products
8Current Trends for IP Commercialisation in
Australia
- Licensing of protected IP to existing companies
is the most common form of research
commercialisation and generates by far the most
revenue. - Success depends crucially on a strong absorptive
capacity in industry. - Australian industry, with its fragmentation,
small size and low RD investment in general has
a relatively poor capacity to absorb
university-generated technology. For this reason,
many linkages have to be established with
overseas firms.
DEST Report Best Practice Processes for
University Research Commercialisation, 2002
9Science - Industry Linkages are Inseparable
- The nation that fosters an infrastructure of
linkages among and between firms, universities
and government gains competitive advantage
through quicker information diffusion and product
deployment - ..The performance of an innovation system now
depends on the intensity and effectiveness of
the interactions between the main actors involved
in the generation and diffusion of knowledge
DEST Report Best Practice Processes for
University Research Commercialisation, 2002
10Feeding the Pipeline Commercialisation Activity
for Universities (per US billion research
expenditure)
DEST National Survey of research
Commercialisation years 2001 and 2002. October
2004
11Australian University Commercialisation
Performance
- Do reasonably well in licensing and start-up
activity. - Poor record of novel patent performance - fewer
United States patents issued. - Question
- Is our ability to produce novel innovative
discoveries a reflection of lower investment in
RD and poor industry RD activity?
12Technology SMEs
- Innovations though RD recognised as vital to
existence of a typical SME, but focused around
design and development i.e. incremental
improvements - Expenditure on high risk speculative RD rare,
unless considerable revenues to support. - A strong patent portfolio not relevant to most
technology SMEs (but c.f. biotech where IP
vital). - Dependence on federal and state grants to support
RD activities.
Source SMEs in Australias High-Technology
Sector Challenges and Opportunities. Temperley
et al. CSIRO/AEEMA, 2004
13Increasing Technology Diffusion and Industry
Absorptive Capacity is the Key
- Facts
- Absorptive capacity identified as a key source of
productivity growth. - Firms found to be more frequently involved in
external RD cooperation the more they spend on
internal RD. - What are we doing?
- Industry Action Agendas a step towards driving
industry engagement. - New AusIndustry Industry Cooperative Research
Program about product realisation may enhance
this further but is 23M enough? - University-Industry Linkage Grants A mechanism
but are they working? - University academics attitude to industry
engagement still a barrier
14European Countries The State of the Innovation
Play
15Why are some countries more successful than
others?
- Have ability to efficiently translate research
into high tech. manufactured products/services - Strong GDP underpins innovation.
- Ability to effectively facilitate technology
diffusion.
16What does it all mean?
- Future economic drivers will be around technology
sector convergence (life sciences and ICT). - Globally this is where focus is RD, Investment,
product realisation and markets. - Australia weak electronics/ICT sector, emerging
but small life science sector. - Australia low generator of novel and leading
edge IP. - Australia short-termism driven by government
policies of the day university-industry
engagement weak Industry innovation policy
fragmented low industry absorptive capacity
poor translational ability for IP. - EU studies show that successful countries have
- High GDP and high RD spend
- High level of BERD.
- Effective technology diffusion channels
- Excellence in manufacturing and services delivery
This is what Australia Requires