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Innovation: A Dutch European perspective

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Leave it to my colleague Dominique Foray to describe in ... Duality between internationalisation of private R&D as opposed to nationalisation of public R&D. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Innovation: A Dutch European perspective


1
Innovation A Dutch European perspective
  • Luc Soete
  • University of Maastricht
  • MERIT
  • http//www.merit.unimaas.nl
  • Washington, January 27th-28th, 2003

2
Outline
  • Leave it to my colleague Dominique Foray to
    describe in detail impact of digital technologies
    on process of innovation just a couple of
    remarks
  • Focus here rather on knowledge gap between US and
    Europe also a reflection of the lower diffusion
    of ICT in Europe
  • Four issues
  • EU-US gap in private RD
  • mismatch public-private research
  • human capital gap
  • innovation gap

3
Impact of ICT on knowledge production
  • Increase in productivity of RD thanks to the
    increase in the codification of knowledge and of
    digital communication between researchers
  • Increase in spreading and diffusion of knowledge
    thanks to digital transparency
  • Increase in rate of return to learning thanks
    to digital education forms, distant learning,
    versioning

4
Impact of ICT on knowledge productivity
  • IT (I factor equivalent to increase/speed in data
    manipulation, embodied in machines/instruments)
    increases the social rate of return to research
    and development, but private rate depends on
    appropriation and its limits
  • CT (C factor aspect of access, networking)
    increases possibilities for catching up but
    depends crucially op open access, know-who,
    barter exchange of knowledge
  • ICT increases social and private rate of return
    to learning (formal and informal education,
    training)

5
1. The emerging knowledge and efficiency gap
between EU and US
  • A long term perspective lagging behind, catching
    up and again lagging behind in private RD
  • Reflected in the shift in the relationship with
    productivity growth between the 60s and 90s
  • EU-US Business Enterprise RD gap has grown
    rapidly over 90s
  • Concentrated in ICT sectors and biotechnology

6
Figure 1 Business Financed RD as a of Value
Added
7
Figure 2a Relationship between BERD (1967) and
productivity growth (1967-1972)
8
Figure 2b Relationship between BERD (1995) and
productivity growth (1995-2000)
9
Figure 3a Trend in the BERD GAP between EU and US
10
Figure 3b Trend in the BERD gap by sector
11
Diagnosis
  • Dutch insights
  • Fragmented RD in the 70s across EU countries,
    strongly linked to national champions efforts
  • Specialisation across the EU of business RD
    during 80s/90s. Impact of 1992 Single Market on
    rationalisation of RD of large MNCs
  • Attraction of US in the late 90s a new
    phenomenon concentration of RD worldwide.
  • Efficiency of outside links of RD activities as
    important as internal ones. Hence interest of
    firms to locate their RD labs in best local
    conditions

12
2. The growing mismatch between public and
private knowledge
  • No significant gap in public research between EU
    and US at least until 2000
  • Phenomenon of Dutch knowledge disease
  • Improving quality and strengthening research
    capacities, but no specialisation. Trend towards
    national research autarchy
  • Duality between internationalisation of private
    RD as opposed to nationalisation of public RD.
    Growing mismatch
  • Similar trends in the rest of Europe? Hence
    strong need for ERA not just of public
    research, but of public-private research
    interaction

13
Figure 3c Trend in the gap in public RD
14
Figure 4 Trend in public, inclusive higher
education, RD
15
(No Transcript)
16
3. A Human Knowledge Gap
  • Significant gap between EU and US in employment
    of SE in Business sector
  • Ageing of European SE from teachers down to
    professors and SE researchers
  • Renewal rate of human capital in Europe low,
    immigration levels low, emigration high in those
    countries with low levels of private BERD
  • Need for a reformulation of Barcelona and ERA?

17
Figure 6 SE as of labour force (growth rates
1995-2000)
18
Figure 7 ST graduates by EU member country
19
4. The Innovation Gap
  • In the end it is the innovation gap which is most
    important many factors play a role
  • Patent costs in EU compared to US
  • Capital costs
  • The Lisbon consensus the most dynamic and
    competitive region in the world, while
    maintaining/activating Europes social model
  • Has the real question been asked link between
    innovation and risk taking and labour market
    security, in particular hiring and firing?

20
Figure 8 Patent costs in EU, US and Japan
21
American firms grow faster
Creation of EU and US firms among the World top
1,000
Since 1980
1950 - 1979
Before 1950
EU
USA
22
Smaller firms need RD
Annual growth of GDP 1991- 2000 ()
Proportion of innovative firms doing RD ()
23
Figure 9 Regulatory barriers index (OECD)
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