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The Evolution of UK Technology

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Title: The Evolution of UK Technology


1
The Evolution of UK Technology Innovation
Policy since the late 1970s
  • This paper underlying this presentation began as
    an historical account of UK Technology
    Innovation Policy since the late 1970s by John
    Barber.
  • In cooperation with Luke Georghiou it was then
    rewritten as a book chapter describing the
    relationship between the development of UK
    Technology Innovation Policy and the
    construction of an explicit policy rationale
    plans for the book fell through.
  • Although several other government departments had
    an influence on UK technology development the
    Department of Trade Industry had prime
    responsibility for explicit formulation of
    technology and innovation policy until 2007. The
    Treasury was closely involved during various key
    episodes.
  • EU funding via the Framework Programmes and
    Structural Funds became increasingly important
    and exceeded DTI expenditure in some areas.
  • John Barber worked in DTI from 1984 to 2006 and
    Luke Georghiou acted as an adviser and consultant
    to DTI from the early 1980s onwards.
  • The paper also draws an a wider study of UK
    industrial policy during this period by Margaret
    Sharp.
  • The paper remains work in progress.

2
Timeline of developments in UK (DTI) Technology
Innovation Policy-1
  • Fears that UK Business Enterprise RD might
    collapse in the 1980/81 recession induced the
    Conservative Government to introduce Support for
    Innovation (SFI) the main elements of which had
    been put in place by the previous Labour
    Government.
  • A joint review of industrial support carried out
    in 1984/5 by DTI and Treasury introduced a
    codified policy rationale and laid the
    foundations for systematic evaluation.
  • In 1988 a white paper Command 278 ended support
    for single company RD projects except for the
    smallest firms and placed the emphasis on support
    for collaborative RD.
  • In 1993 a review by the new Chief Adviser on ST
    resulted in the refocusing of support for
    collaborative RD on early stage technology (LINK
    programme) and adaption of technology for
    transfer to SMEs.
  • The election of a Labour government in 1997
    resulted in more emphasis on the exploitation of
    scientific research.
  • In 2003 a set of reviews led to a complete
    revamping of Technology Innovation Policy and
    Business Support more generally.
  • In 2007 DTI was split between the Department for
    Business and Regulatory Reform and the Department
    for Innovation, Universities and Skills (DIUS).
    Support for the exploitation of science and
    longer term technology development (DIUS) is now
    separate from support for business innovation
    (BERR).

3
Timeline of developments in UK (DTI) Technology
Innovation Policy -2
  • In between these episodes of discrete change
    technology and innovation policy evolved more
    gradually.
  • New problems and issues were indentified and new
    policy instruments/schemes were designed to deal
    with them.
  • In most cases these were subjected to detailed
    appraisal by officials and those with weak
    rationales and indifferent chances of success
    weeded out. Final decision was taken by
    Ministers.
  • Monitoring and evaluation of existing schemes
    showed which offered good value for money and
    should be continued.
  • Some proposals for new schemes were conceived in
    response to high level political needs and were
    subjected to less rigorous assessment. They were
    less likely to be successful.
  • Policy making during these intervening periods
    was mainly bottom-up. Successful Technology
    Innovation Policy requires that such bottom-up
    analysis be combined with top-down strategy

4
Factors driving change in Technology Innovation
Policy
  • A move away from the interventionist subsidy
    driven policies of the 1970s towards more
    minimalist policies towards business.
  • Strengthening of the belief in the efficacy of
    free markets and in the limitations of government
    action. Increasing belief that business knows
    best. Mistrust of anything which smacked of
    industrial policy or corporatism. Increasing
    Treasury suspicions about DTI support for, and
    relationships, with industry.
  • Increasing adherence to a simple neoclassical
    models of resource allocations and economic
    growth. Continued adherence to a simple linear
    model of innovation.
  • Privatisation particularly of PRSEs.
  • Changing perceptions of the innovation process
    and its relationship to economic performance
    social wellbeing. These partly reflected research
    into innovation processes and systems but mainly
    resulted from shifting views amongst ministers,
    senior civil servants and other stakeholders.
  • Changing perceptions of world-wide developments
    in science, technology and innovation. Increasing
    focus on scientific research as the primary
    source of new technological knowledge. Emergence
    of naive visions of a knowledge-based or post
    industrial society.
  • Emulation of policy developments in other
    countries particularly Japan in the
    1980s and the USA more recently. Perception
    of these developments was often flawed.
  • Assessment of UK performance at science,
    technology and innovation.
  • Systematic monitoring and evaluation of policies
    and programmes. Main effect was during episodes
    of gradual change.

5
Rationale for Technology Innovation Policy
  • Identify some aspect of UK technology
    innovation performance which is not regarded as
    satisfactory or some future worthwhile objective
    or strategy whose achievement is threatened.
  • Identify a defect in the working of market
    forces, or in the functioning of the innovation
    system, that seems likely to prevent the weakness
    in performance from being corrected or worthwhile
    objective being realised (this is frequently
    called the rationale by itself).
  • Devise some form of government support or
    intervention which will eliminate or offset the
    defect at a cost which is expected to be less
    than the benefits thus realised.
  • Marked emphasis on additionality both terms of
    inputs and outputs. Behaviourial additionality
    was often implied but not made explicit.
  • Identifying the counterfactual was difficult as
    were the effects of displacement.
  • Because many of the stakeholders thought about
    innovation in terms of neoclassical economics
    rationales for policy instruments relied heavily
    on market failure.
  • An alternative approach would be to identify how
    Government might influence behaviour in ways
    which analysis of the National Innovation System
    (NIS) suggests have a good chance of being
    beneficial.

6
The period to 1987 - SFI
  • Prior to May 1979 the main emphasis of UK
    Industrial Policy was support for fixed
    investment and industrial restructuring plus some
    support for dissemination of best practice in
    industrial and business practices.
  • Fears that the 1980/81 might result in a collapse
    of UK Business Enterprise RD caused the
    Conservative Government to implement the
    innovation support schemes left behind by the
    previous Labour Government.
  • The emphasis of Industrial Policy switched to
    Support for Innovation (SFI)
  • - Selective grants to both large and small
    companies of up to 25 of the eligible costs of
    RD projects
  • - In the case of the largest companies memorandum
    of understanding were negotiated which set out
    what the company would do in exchange for
    support
  • Schemes designed to build up the UK capability in
    a particular area of technology via support both
    for RD and investment in advanced equipment
  • The Microelectronics Applications Programme
    (MAP)which provided a range of support for
    technology transfer the spread of best
    practice.
  • These programmes were supplemented by the
    introduction of support for collaborative
    research the Joint Optoelectronics Research
    Scheme (JOERS) in 1982 and the much bigger Alvey
    Programme in 1983.

7
Industrial Support Review 1984-5
  • Joint review of industrial support (ISR) by DTI
    Treasury.
  • Not published but many of the conclusions were
    reflected in Current policy practice and
    problems from a UK perspective by John Barber
    Geoff White in Economic policy and technological
    performance edited by Partha Dasgupta and Paul
    Stoneman, CUP 1987, reprinted 2005.
  • Set out a five point market failure rationale for
    technology and innovation policy.
  • Risk Uncertainty
  • Information possessed by market is
    limited/inadequate e.g. in respect of novel
    technologies
  • Barriers to competition and non-competitive
    market structure e.g. High upfront RD costs
  • Externalities .
  • Path dependency/dynamic inefficiency.
  • This list reflected the concern at the time to
    justify single company support for innovation in
    a situation where the government was strongly
    committed to the free market.
  • Also by 1984 increasing demand for SFI by
    industry was threatening to outstrip DTIs
    budget.
  • The ISR also contained a recommendation for a
    proforma which would govern the appraisal,
    monitoring and evaluation of DTI industrial
    support. This proforma developed into the ROAME
    system which first appeared in 1986.
  • In returned Treasury agreed to leave the detailed
    formulation of policy to the DTI.

8
1985 to 1987 (1)
  • ISR was a codification of policy rather than a
    root and branch review.
  • But after 1985 there was a significant shift of
    emphasis away from single company support towards
    support for collaborative RD and technological
    transfer.
  • Decision to reduce amount of support going to
    projects near the market place on the grounds
    that it generated fewer externalities (and was
    less risky). It is not always true that near
    market implies a weaker market failure
    rationale.
  • Evaluation of those large companies which
    received most support experienced difficulties in
    establishing its additionality and value for
    money. In any case large corporates were now in a
    much stronger financial position than they had
    been in 1980/81.
  • There was evidence that the methods of financial
    control used by many large UK companies could
    result in sub-optimal capital rationing,
    short-termism and myopia leading to insufficient
    investment in RD. However using public money to
    offset this could involve significant moral
    hazard.
  • In 1986 the DTI Assessment Unit (AU) was
    established to undertake evaluations of
    Technology Innovation policy. In 1987 it
    carried out an evaluation of single company SFI
    given to small and medium sized firms. This was
    shown to have yielded excellent value for money.

9
1985 to 1987 (2)
  • The Conservative Governments Next Steps
    Initiative was designed to improve management of
    the functions carried out by government and where
    appropriate to privatise them or vest them in
    arms-length agencies.
  • As a part of the initiative a review began in
    1986 of the four DTI Research Establishments
    NPL, NEL, LGC and Warren Springs Laboratory the
    end of this episode only came in 1994 - see a
    later slide.
  • Much of their work was concerned with measurement
    standards so DTI undertook an analysis of the
    economics of measurement standards there was
    little extant literature at time.
  • This revealed the importance of public goods as a
    rationale for technology and innovation policy
    about a third of the budget consisted of support
    for standards and associated statutory and
    regulatory activities.
  • In 1986 DTI with the help of PREST helped the
    Advisory Committee on Science Technology
    (ACOST) to undertake a study of The Barriers to
    Growth in Small Firms. This showed how complex
    interactions between market failure and the
    problems of change and management bureaucracies
    in small firms can inhibit growth.
  • This report did not find favour with DTI at the
    time and although various measures have been
    introduced over the years to encourage the
    creation and development of innovative small
    firms the systematic approach suggested in
    Barriers to Growth has never been properly
    adopted.

10
ALVEY PROGRAMME 1983-1987
  • Collaborative programme of IT research with a
    planned spend over 5 years of 350m - 200
    government 150 Industry but not all new money.
  • A response to the introduction in 1982 by Japan
    of the ICOT 5th Generation Computer Programme.
  • Included research into VLSI, Software
    Engineering, Intelligent Knowledge Based Systems,
    Man-Machine Interface plus a programme of
    large-scale demonstrators.
  • The inability to find a document setting out the
    rationale for Alvey was another reason for the
    ISR.
  • The Director of Alvey established a programme of
    real-time evaluation at the outset. This was
    undertaken by PREST SPRU with help from LBS.
  • Evaluation continued until 1990 to allow time for
    the results of the research to be embodied in new
    products and processes. At this stage Alvey had
    mainly succeeded in its technical objectives but
    failed in its commercial/industrial objectives.
    However additional benefits have continued to
    flow even up to the present day.
  • The Alvey evaluation developed many of the
    methodologies for evaluating long-term
    collaborative RD programmes.
  • Several members of the SPRU (who subsequently set
    up Technopolis) and PREST teams became
    international evaluation experts and made major
    contributions to the evaluation of the Framework
    Programmes and of similar collaborative research
    programmes in other countries.

11
1988 to 1997 (1)
  • In 1997 of Lord Young Kenneth Clarke became DTI
    Ministers. Review of Business Support including
    that for Technology Innovation undertaken by
    Treasury Cabinet Office with limited
    involvement of DTI officials.
  • Results set out in White Paper Cmnd 278 DTI- The
    Department for Enterprise published in January
    1988.
  • Cabinet commissioned review of DTI RD support
    programmes (Hicks) accompanied by parallel
    reviews of other departments RD programmes
  • SFI and all single company support abolished
    except for firms with lt 25 employees
    (SMART).
  • Evaluation evidence was pointing towards
    abolition of single company support for
    large companies but retention for small medium
    sized firms evaluation of single company
    SFI support for the latter was not published.
  • Main emphasis to be on support for collaborative
    RD and technology transfer.
  • Alvey Programme which was originally intended to
    last for 10 years replaced by much more modest
    scheme the Information Engineering Advanced
    Technology Programme (IEATP) IT86 (Bide)
    committee recommendation for applications
    programme rejected. UK firms left to apply to
    ESPRIT II much larger than ESPRIT I.

12
1988 to 1997 (2)
  • The white paper envisaged four types of support
    four collaborative RD
  • LINK Collaborative research undertaken jointly
    by forms HEIs.
  • Advanced Technology Programmes (ATP) Longer term
    industrially-led collaborative RD projects
    between UK firms into advanced technologies.
  • EUREKA Support for international RD
    collaboration. Never high priority.
  • General Industrial Collaborative Projects (GICP)
    aimed at helping low and medium technology SMEs
    vi an RTO or industrially orientated university
    department.
  • Such programmes take much more time to set up
    than allocating support to single company RD
    projects. Thus the budget was significantly
    under-spent in the several years after 1988.
  • Fears that Treasury might cut allocation led to
    lax ex-ante appraisal plus extensive recruitment
    of industrial secondees in order to administer
    the budget.
  • Many new ATP schemes were of doubtful merit and a
    review carried out in 1993 by the then DTI Chief
    Adviser on Science Technology recommended that
    many be closed down.
  • Thereafter support for collaborative RD was
    mainly via LINK and GICP.

13
1988-1997 Rationale for Collaborative RD
  • Concentration of RD support for collaborative
    RD required development of appropriate
    rationale.
  • From the firms point of view the benefits of long
    term research are uncertain in kind and in who
    can benefit from them (externalities)
  • Much of the output of research is knowledge which
    is a public good. Even if the firm can exploit
    this knowledge others can too
  • Collaboration can reduce uncertainty by
    increasing the breadth of the research and by
    partially internalising externalities. It also
    allows the sharing of knowledge and expertise
  • But there are barriers to collaboration finding
    the right partner, increased transaction costs
    and risk of disputes e.g. over IPR
  • Much collaboration takes place without government
    intervention but in other cases government can
    facilitate collaborations which offer the
    prospect of net economic/social benefits
  • This can be achieved by matchmaking, by enhancing
    participants vision of what research should be
    undertaken, by acting as a referee to ensure fair
    play as well as by the provision of financial
    support.

14
1988-1997 Evaluation of DTIs four International
Technology Transfer Schemes
  • These schemes were small but their evaluation in
    the late 1980s and early 1990s made DTI think
    carefully about the process of technology
    transfer. With help from Peter Swan was described
    as consisting of five stages
  • Awareness by the firm of a technology relevant to
    its needs
  • Investigation by the firm of exactly how
    acquisition of the technology in question might
    improve its performance
  • Transfer of the technology from the identified
    source to the firm
  • Absorption of the technology by the recipient
    firm
  • Exploitation of the technology by the recipient
    firm.
  • Only when the exploitation stage has been
    successfully completed will the firm have fully
    acquired the technology concerned.
  • Firms may need help at each stage with different
    market failures applying.
  • The recipient firm will require the complementary
    knowledge and skills to absorb and adapt the
    technology and an actual or potential presence in
    the markets in which it can be exploited.
  • Required more careful consideration by DTI
    economists of the nature of knowledge and
    information (with help from Stuart Macdonald who
    was then working in DTI).
  • A similar model was develop by John Bessant et al
    in a study carried out for DTI in 2005

15
Effect of Cmnd 278 on the distribution of RD
support
  • Recommendation 21 of the 1988 Hicks Review was
    to Monitor the effects upon small and medium
    sized enterprises of the changes in innovation
    policy and to consider whether further measures
    should be introduced and to report by June 1990.
  • The report concluded that while the real total
    value of RD support for all firms fell by
    one-third it fell by 65 in the case of firms
    with 50-199 employees and 80 in the case of
    firms with 200-249 employees.
  • The value of support going to firms with less
    than 50 employees remained unchanged because of
    the introduction of SMART
  • Support for large firms fell by only one-fifth
    since they were the main recipients of grants for
    collaborative RD.
  •  Consequently in 1991 support for single company
    RD projects was restored for independent
    companies with 25 to 249 employees (the DTI had
    in the meanwhile come into line with the EU
    definition of an SME ) with the introduction of
    the SPUR scheme.
  • SPUR never seemed to be a great favourite with
    Ministers and later become the SMART Special
    Facility which was subsequently abolished.

16
1988 to 1997 Manufacturing into the 90s
  • The Manufacturing into the 90s programme
    organised a road show in which videos of SMEs
    facing particular but common problems was shown
    to their peers.
  • These were followed up by workshops which
    discussed how SMEs facing similar problems could
    solved these along similar lines to the examplar
    firms.
  • The road shows were very successful in inspiring
    SMEs to take effective problem solving action.
    Indeed many of them were impatient with the
    workshops wishing to proceed immediately to the
    action phase.
  • The existing rationale for Man90s appeared to
    offer no justification for its success (worked in
    practice but not in theory).
  • It quickly became clear that DTI was faced with
    instances of bounded rationality.
  • Managers of SMEs are very busy people can only
    focus on a limited number of issues at any one
    time and have a limited capacity to absorb and
    process information. Show them an example of a
    firm like themselves which found an effective
    solution to a problem which is also troubling
    them and they will adjust their focus and take
    action.
  • This is a good example of how policy makers can
    improve business performance by holding up a
    mirror in which business can see itself.
  • Advice from consultants does not in general
    appear to be so effective partly because many
    SMEs do not trust them. However consulting
    organisations which run inter-firm benchmarking
    clubs are improving the performance of
    participating firms in a roughly similar fashion.

17
1988 to 1997 (3)
  • In April Michael Heseltine was appointed
    President of the Board of Trade.
  • He appointed Geoff Robinson, Director of the IBM
    Hursley Laboratory, as DTIs Chief Adviser on
    Science and Technology.
  • In 1993 Geoff led a review of DTI Technology and
    Innovation Support Schemes which concluded many
    of the Advanced Technology Progammes (ATPs)
    introduced following the 1988 White Paper were
    not likely to offer value for money and
    recommended that many of them be shut down.
  • Future support for collaborative R D was
    mainly confined to LINK and adaptation of
    technology for transfer to SMEs. The main
    emphasis was to be on awareness, technology
    transfer and spread of best practice mainly,
    though not entirely, to SMEs.
  • There was to be a much greater emphasis on
    improving the climate for innovation.
  • Geoff Robinson is said to have put proposals to
    Heseltine for new technology support but the
    President does not appear to have been
    interested 

18
1988-1997 DTI PSREs
  • DTI had four research establishment which had
    become Next Step Agencies in the late 1980s
  • National Physical Laboratory (NPL) mainly
    concerned with measurement standards
  • Laboratory of the Government Chemist (LGC)
    responsible for analytical measurement
  • National Engineering Laboratory (NEL) had
    responsibility for flow measurement but mainly
    did engineering research
  • Warren Springs Laboratory which covered
    environmental issues.
  • It became clear that Mr Heseltine was not a fan
    of government laboratories and a study was
    undertaken with a view to privatising them.
  • Because of the public good nature of their
    standards work it was accepted that NPL and LGC
    must remain independent of commercial interests.
    NPL remains in government ownership but is
    privately managed and LGC became a company
    limited by guarantee owned by the Society for
    Chemistry.
  • NEL was sold to Siemens while Warren Springs was
    merged into AEA Technology.
  • Guarantees as to the level of future government
    funding were made in respect of the next few
    years.
  • DTI funding of standards remained an actively
    debated issue for some years afterwards.

19
General Policy towards PSREs
  • One of the weaknesses of the rationale for
    Technology and Innovation Policy throughout the
    period has been the inability to define a role
    for technology-base institutions which were not
    universities but were not wholly in the private
    sector.
  • These include public sector research
    establishments (PSREs) and industrial research
    organisations.
  • The experience of other European countries and
    the US show these institutions can play a useful
    role in filling the gap between academic research
    and fully commercial RD and in anticipating the
    needs of firms before the latter are fully aware
    of them.
  • They can also be a source of disinterested advice
    on technologies with which a particular firm or
    sector is unfamiliar.
  • They can play a useful role in developing
    networks and promoting collaboration between
    firms and universities, in leading collaborative
    research projects and in the implementation of
    technology and innovation policy.
  • The inability or reluctance to define a rationale
    for such organisations has led the UK to
    privatise many of them and their relative absence
    on the UK scene may be seen as a relative
    weakness in our technological infrastructure.
  • Their absence can put the UK at a disadvantage
    when applying for EU funding.
  • In recent years universities have been somewhat
    encouraged to move into this role particularly at
    the local level but there are limits to which
    they are able or even should play this role.

20
Policy towards RTOs
  • The UK has a strong set of private Research and
    Technology Organisations (RTOs members of AIRTO)
    but policy towards them has tended to oscillate.
  • Too much reliance on government support sustained
    some inefficient and non-dynamic industrial
    research associations. Reducing that support
    revitalised some RTOs, turning them into
    effective commercial RTOs, and contributed to the
    demise of those unable to stand on their own
    feet.
  • However some of the more successful and
    technologically sophisticated RTOs have become
    highly reliant on custom from abroad as UK firms
    fail to appreciate the value of what they have to
    offer.
  • Lack of consistent public financial support
    inhibits RTOs from developing and maintaining the
    capacity to help smaller, less technologically
    sophisticated and less innovative UK firms.
  • Helping such companies is often not a
    commercially attractive proposition.
  • Government support can contribute to the costs
    incurred by a RTO in defining  what such firms
    need and make the latter more confident and
    better equipped to source those needs
    commercially.

21
Realising our Potential A Strategy for Science,
Engineering and Technology
  • White Paper Command 2250 published in May 1993.
  • Cmnd 2250 ushered in the current era where the
    direct exploitation by industry of the results of
    scientific research is seen as the key objective
    of innovation policy.
  • Office of Science Technology (OST) became part
    of DTI in July 1995.
  • Industry-Science Relations (ISR) is sometimes
    seen as merely a matter of improving linkages
    between the two. However it is more important
  • (a) to ensure that industry has the complementary
    knowledge, capabilities and assets to exploit the
    results of scientific research and
  • (b) that universities are given the frameworks
    and incentives to work with industry.
  • Also important to recognise that the process of
    innovation differs between sectors and often
    between small and large companies and that this
    significantly affects the way in which firms in
    different sectors or of different sizes can and
    need to interact with the Science Base.
  • Command 2250 also introduced the Foresight
    process.

22
1994 to 1996 Competiveness White Papers
  • The 1992-97 Conservative Government placed a
    strong emphasis on Competitiveness and the
    contribution which Science, Technology and
    Innovation could play in maintaining and
    increasing the international competitiveness of
    the UK Economy.
  • This was presented in a series of
    Competitiveness White Papers under the title
    Forging Ahead in 1994, 1995 and 1996. In
    addition to the promotion of ISR these white
    papers placed emphasis on
  • Raising awareness of the importance of
    innovation
  • Securing access for UK companies to the widest
    range of world technologies and know-how
  • Facilitating co-operation between organisations
    at home and overseas
  • Spreading best practice amongst firms
  • Encouraging a supply of people with the right
    skills
  • Ensuring that regulation in the UK and in the EU
    does not inhibit innovation and the legislative
    framework is permissive rather than restrictive
    and
  • Ensuring that the Governments activities in
    Science and Technology contribute to National
    Competitiveness.
  • The White Papers introduced a number of new
    technology innovation policy measures but these
    were often dreamed up at short notice and were
    not subject to rigorous ex-ante appraisal.
  • Those drafting the White Papers lack knowledge of
    innovation processes and systems and slipped too
    easily into a framework based on the linear model
    of innovation.

23
1988 to1997 - Policy Formulation (1)
  • During most of the 1990s changes in DTI
    Technology Innovation policy was largely driven
    by a bottom-up process whereby DTI Industry
    Technology Divisions put forward proposals for
    new schemes.
  • They had a positive incentive to do this in order
    to preserve budgets and jobs when existing
    schemes finished (normally after 3 years) and
    where possible to increase the scope of their
    activities.
  • These proposals were submitted to a programme
    committee in the form of a ROAME statement which
    described the proposal, set out the rationale,
    objectives and appraisal and how the new scheme
    would be monitored and evaluated (in outline
    only).
  • The proposal would be examined at a meeting in
    which the main interrogators were DTI economists,
    programme managers from other areas and sometimes
    a member of the Finance Directorate.
  • The key part of the discussion was to establish
    clearly what the scheme was trying to do, how it
    propose to do it and what the key deliverables
    might be.
  • Once this was done the economists could define a
    valid rationale if one existed.
  • Subsequent evaluation showed that proposals which
    stood up well to this process had a good chance
    of success.

24
1988 to 1997 - Policy Formulation (2)
  • Proposals which were handed down from on high (to
    give something to announce in a White Paper on
    ministerial speech) usually escaped the full
    rigours of the appraisal process and had a more
    patchy track record.
  • The Competiveness White Papers should have
    provided an opportunity to inject some top-down
    strategy but this was not taken.
  • Top-down proposals for new technology and
    innovation support programmes which are conceived
    after a thorough analysis of innovation
    performance processes, opportunities and
    threats are a key part of policy formulation.
  • The ROAME process then becomes the means by which
    the details of such proposals are properly
    tested. Not all well-founded top-down proposals
    will survive this process as the devil is often
    in the detail.
  • At the same time proposals for new programmes can
    properly emerge from evaluation, research or
    detailed analysis. These should then be tested
    for how well they fit the overall strategy and
    vision.
  • Good policies and programmes are most likely to
    emerge from such iteration between the top-down
    and bottom-up approaches.

25
1997 to 2001
  • Election of a Labour Government in 1997 did not
    lead to much immediate change.
  • The broad pattern of support for Science,
    Technology and Innovation remained unchanged
    greater emphasis was placed on encouraging the
    commercial exploitation of scientific research.
  • Science funding was significantly increased and
    the Treasury are took a much greater interest in
    Science Policy reflecting the concerns of the
    Gordon Brown.
  • New schemes e.g. Science-Enterprise Challenge
    HEIF were introduced to encourage knowledge
    transfer and the creation of spin-out companies
    from Universities which were encouraged to make
    more use of their expertise to help UK Business.
  • An RD tax credit was introduce in 1999 for SMEs
    and in 2002 for larger companies.
  • The overarching objective of all micro-economic
    policies changed from Competitiveness to the need
    to increase productivity.
  • While DTI Ministers and the Treasury were
    convinced of the importance on funding and
    exploiting scientific research there was a much
    weaker appreciation of the need to raise the
    technological competence and propensity to
    innovate of existing UK firms.
  • Outside of a relatively small group of officials
    and experts and those in business directly
    concerned with technology and innovation
    understanding of the nature of innovation remain
    poor.
  • Lack of a constituency for a well thought out
    technology and innovation policy.
  • Spending on DTI support for technology and
    innovation remain flat. OECD figures suggested
    that the UK spent less as a proportion of GDP
    than nearly all other advanced industrial
    countries.
  • 1997 to 2001 was typified by the announcement of
    minor and repackaged initiatives.

26
UK Reviews of Innovation Policy and Business
Support 2000-2003
  • In 2001 Patricia Hewitt became Secretary of State
    and within a short period the following policy
    reviews were set in train
  • Review of all Business Support Measures carried
    out by external consultants
  • Innovation Review undertaken by newly created
    Innovation Group with participation of Treasury
    officials and outside experts
  • A review by Richard Lambert of Science-Industry
    Links
  • Innovation Report Competing in the Global
    Economy The innovation challenge published in
    December 2003
  • Supporting economic analysis published as DTI
    Economics Paper No. 7 Competing in the Global
    Economy The innovation challenge
  • Two internal reviews of organisational structure
    and budget management.

27
Business Support Review
  • Covered all business support including that for
    technology innovation.
  • Prompted by complaints that system was too
    complex, DTI had 400 schemes.
  • Complaint was exaggerated most money spent via a
    dozen or so schemes and most of the small schemes
    were technology transfer schemes customised to
    the needs of particular sub-sectors. Both
    research and evaluation results suggest that such
    customization is necessary. Mainly a
    signposting/marketing problem.
  • Large number of schemes was a barrier to
    understanding by ministers, senior officials and
    other high-level stakeholders, a governance
    issue.
  • The outcome was a rationalisation of DTI support.
    Ten new business support products were
    introduced including
  • Knowledge Transfer Partnerships (KTPs) replacing
    the longstanding and very successful Teaching
    Company Scheme
  • Support for investigating an Innovative Idea
    which provided subsidised guidance on managing an
    innovation project
  • Support for Collaborative RD
  • Support for Knowledge Transfer Networks which
    inter alia replaced Faraday Partnerships.
  • All existing support schemes were closed. The
    review also introduced a new system of ex-ante
    appraisal, monitoring and evaluation.

28
Innovation Review (1)
  • The Innovation Review used a National Innovation
    System Framework. This was characterised by seven
    critical factors which affect innovation
  • Access to sources of new technological knowledge
    including the Science Base and other firms
  • Capacity to absorb and exploit new knowledge and
    improved cultural attitude towards creativity in
    firms
  • Access to finance both external and internal
  • Competition, which is both a driver and product
    of innovation, and entrepreneurship
  • Customer demand for innovative goods and services
    and suppliers as a source of innovative inputs
  • The regulatory environment including the role of
    intellectual property rights, and
  • Networking and collaboration.
  • The Review attempted to assess how far UK
    innovation performance was meeting the challenge
    of intensifying international competition
    resulting from globalisation and the acceleration
    of scientific and technological change. UK
    companies will need to compete on the basis of
    unique value and innovation is central to this.
  • The Review drew on analysis by DTI economists, on
    a range of academic and other research, on advice
    provided by an Academic Advisory Panel as well as
    on wider processes of consultation.

29
Innovation Review (2) Main Conclusions on UK
Innovation Performance
  • The Innovation Review Report was published in
    December 2003. It concluded that
  • UK productivity is lower than that of other major
    industrial countries.
  • UK Innovation performance is, at best, average
    compared to other major industrial countries.
  • The UK is unable to take advantage of is
    relatively strong science base because of low
    levels of spend on innovation.
  • The above is true despite the marked relative
    improvement in many aspects of UK economic
    performance e.g. macro-economic stability,
    micro-economic context for competition since the
    early 1980s.
  • The UK needs to move to new phase of economic
    development from competing on costs to competing
    on unique value and innovation.
  • In arriving at these conclusions the Innovation
    Review also drew on a Report by Professor Michael
    Porter published in May 2003.
  • Porter pointed out that the UK needed to move to
    competing on unique value and because of earlier
    reforms was well placed to do so. It also pointed
    out a need to improve networking among UK
    businesses.

30
Innovation Review (3) Policy Proposals
  • Introduce a Technology Strategy.
  • Give Regional Development Agencies (RDAs) a
    greater role in stimulating innovation and in
    facilitating knowledge transfer from the Science
    Base.
  • Make more use of public procurement to encourage
    innovation.
  • Create a more demand led, responsive and flexible
    training system (Separate White Paper on skills
    published in 2003).
  • Enhance exploitation of scientific research.
  • Encourage Networks, clusters and collaboration.
  • Foster the Spread of Business Best Practice.
  • But the implementation of these proposals was to
    be through the ten new business support products
    (replacing around 400 schemes) introduced as a
    result of the Business Support Review.
  • This has acted as a constraining influence since
    innovation differs considerably across sectors
    and the various aspects of the innovation process
    also need different approaches.
  • The implementation of the reviews on organisation
    and budget management also imposed constraints on
    implementation

31
Innovation Review (4)
  • Core responsibility for appraisal of new
    technology and innovation support proposals was
    move to a business support analytical unit and
    taken away from the economists responsible for
    advice on science, technology and innovation.
  • It became more likely that appraisal would
    constrained within a framework of textbook
    neo-classical market failures and not take
    sufficient account of the knowledge gained of the
    workings of innovation processes and systems in
    the last 20 years.
  •  However the Innovation Review did take forward
    development of the rationale for innovation
    policy in several respects.
  • The recognition by, particularly by the Treasury,
    of the importance of demand in driving innovation
    was an important step forward.
  • The mixture of market failures which create a
    role for the customer in stimulating and
    facilitating the development of new products and
    services is complex involving uncertainty,
    asymmetric and/or limited information, capital
    market failure and missing markets.
  • The adoption of an innovation systems approach
    and the recognition of the importance of
    networking introduced the possibility of
    coordination and systems failures.

32
Lambert Review of Industry Science Links
  • Drew attention to deficiencies in UK industrial
    demand for knowledge.
  • Stressed the importance of networking and
    collaboration.
  • For some time policy on Industry Science
    Relations (ISR) had been dominated by a
    misperception of the Silicon valley effect.
    Many of the key Valley firms were spin-outs from
    existing companies but UK policy focussed on
    spin-out companies from universities.
  • The review suggested that less stress be placed
    on university spin-outs.
  • There was also a belief that US universities were
    much better at transferring knowledge to industry
    but outside of a few elite institutions this is
    not true.
  • The review expressed some warnings that
    over-enthusiastic exploitation of IPR by
    universities may not be conducive to knowledge
    transfer and may inhibit research.
  • The problem of industry-science relations is a
    good example of an innovation system failure with
    a number of individual market failures
    combining to produce a systems effect.

33
Abolition of DTI July 2007
  • In July 2007 DTI was split with responsibility
    for Science and Innovation Policy passing to a
    new Department for Innovation, Universities
    Skills (DIUS)
  • Technology Strategy Board (TSB) given
    responsibility for managing business support and
    innovation development programmes costing around
    200m p.a.
  • These programmes include support for
    collaborative RD, Knowledge Transfer Networks,
    Knowledge Transfer Partnerships, Innovation
    Platforms, Emerging Technologies etc.
  • Substantial amounts of support for Technology
    Innovation continue to be administered by the
    Regional Development Agencies (RDAs) including
    grants for RD undertaken by individual SMEs.
  • Policy responsibility for relations with business
    sectors and general business issues rests with
    the Department for Business Enterprise
    Regulatory Reform.
  • Split between DIUS and BERR plus delegation of
    responsibilities to RDAs and the TSB risks
    fragmentation of technology and innovation policy
    and may reinforce the tendency to concentrate to
    much on the exploitation of scientific research.
  • TSB which is based in Swindon risks capture
    either by Research Councils or by certain
    business sectors.
  • Increasing Important role in policy analysis and
    promotion of innovation of the National Endowment
    for Science, Technology The Arts (NESTA) which
    is funded by the National Lottery.

34
Development of Rationale(1)
  • Market failure rationale set out in the 1985
    Industrial Support Review listed risk
    uncertainty, incomplete information,
    indivisibilities and externalities plus a version
    of path dependency.
  • Discussion of SFI for large companies and the
    evaluation of Managing into the 90s added bounded
    rationality.
  • The debate on short-termism in the late 1980s and
    early 1990s showed how it could result from a
    mixture of uncertainty, asymmetric information
    and bounded rationality.
  • The review of standards laboratories begun in
    1986 brought public goods into the picture.
  • Discussions of technology transfer around 1990
    encourage deeper analysis of the nature of
    information and how markets in information fail
    and drew attention to the importance of firms
    in-house capabilities.
  • John Kays work leading to his 1993 book
    Foundations of Corporate Success drew attention
    to the role of pathological games, firm
    architecture and intangible assets.
  • The expansion of support for collaborative RD in
    the early 1990s required DTI to think more
    carefully about how various market failures
    combine to justify such support.
  • The gradually adoption of a national innovation
    systems approach towards the end of the period
    focussed attention on barriers to networking and
    system failures more generally.

35
Development of Rationale (2)
  • The various market failures overlap and are not
    fully independent of one another. Thus inadequate
    information may be both a cause and a result of
    missing markets and is a major cause of
    uncertainty.
  • We do not have a fully specified dynamic model of
    a capitalist economy which would enable us to
    identify a list of precisely defined market
    failures and even if we did some of the market
    failures might not easily relate to real world
    features.
  • Many of those involved in UK technology and
    innovation policy find this journey from standard
    economic textbook market failures to a broader
    view of the rationale uncomfortable.
  • Typically this was because they were not familiar
    with the large body of grounded research into
    innovation processes and systems, into the
    internal working of firms and into the creation,
    diffusion, embodiment and exploitation of
    knowledge.
  • Douglass Norths statement in his 1993 Nobel
    Lecture that Neo-classical theory is an
    inappropriate tool to analyse and prescribe
    policies to induce economic development does not
    appear to have impacted on many UK economic
    policy makers.

36
Rationale(3)
  • This history suggests that the development of the
    market failure element of the rationale was
    mostly driven by the introduction of new
    programmes or the evaluation of existing
    programmes and that on the whole the
    identification of new rationales did not drive
    changes in policy.
  • One reason for this is that until the 2003
    Innovation Review, changes in policy regimes
    tended to be driven by high level political
    perceptions about what the Government should do
    about UK Technology and Innovation performance
    that were not based on an analysis of innovation
    as it really is.
  • There has been no widely accepted diagnosis of
    the problems affecting UK Technology and
    Innovation performance, their implications for
    wider economic performance, and how they should
    be tackled.
  • There has not been a constructive ongoing
    discussion in the media which would allow such a
    consensus to be created and there is an absence
    of an informed community of stakeholders able to
    provide the ballast needed to prevent
    inadequately considered policy changes from being
    implemented. NESTA appears to be trying to put
    this right.
  • Innovation Policy remains a Cinderella area RD
    tax credits aside the budget has remained broadly
    unchanged in cash terms since the mid-1980s.
  •  A market failure sees government standing
    outside the innovation system intervening to
    correct failures. By contrast a NIS approach
    sees government more as part of the system
    itself. The UK needs to move towards this latter
    standpoint.
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