Title: National HR strategies in a global context
1National HR strategies in a global context
- Luc Soete
- UNU-MERIT,
- University of Maastricht
- The Netherlands
OECD/Germany workshop on Advancing Innovation
human resources, education and training, 17-18
November 2008, Bad Honnef
2Outline
- Alternative HR models between firms and
countries underlying reasons - Convergence between the two models of learning
because of globalisation, lessons from Europe - Global international education challenges
- Financial crisis and knowledge investments
31. Human Resources and the Knowledge economy
back to Schumpeter
- Useful to start from the old Schumpeterian
distinction between the Schumpeter model I and
Schumpeter model II innovation. - Schumpeter I model
- Entrepreneurial model innovation as the basis
of new firm foundation (ICT, biotechnology)
individual inventor-entrepreneur, science based
firms, blue angel/venture capital, importance of
exit framework (functioning stock market, failure
tolerance). - Schumpeter II model
- Incremental innovation model stepwise
innovations based on continuous accumulation of
(tacit) knowledge role of learning internal
human resource investments professionalized RD
labs in large firms. - These two models represent two different models
of learning and HR management within firms and
societies.
4Dominance of two models in way firms operate at
country aggregate level
- Schumpeter I model
- USA
- Canada
- Australia
- Ireland
- Great Britain
- China
-
- Schumpeter II model
- Germany
- France
- Benelux
- Scandinavian countries
- Austria
- Japan
5With major underlying labour market and HR
differences
- Anglo-Saxon model
- Easy hiring and firing
- Shorter contracts
- Modest unemployment benefits
- Weak trade unions
- Labor relations are more conflictuous
- Wage bargaining de-centralized
- Rhineland (Japan) model
- Protection against firing
- Longer stay with same firm
- More generous unemployment benefits
- Strong trade unions
- Labor relations are more co-operative
- Wage bargaining co-ordinated and centralized
6Reflected in real wages differences (1960 100)
7Not in terms of real GDP growth (1960 100)
8Strongly in labour productivity (value added per
hour worked) (1960 100)
9In labour input (working hours) (1960 100)
10And in capital intensity of production
(capital/output) (1960 100)
11Traditional reasons for lower labour productivity
growth
- Negative effects of flexibilization of the labour
market (shorter job duration) - Less loyalty and commitment (firm secrets and
technological knowledge can more easily leak to
competitors) - Historical memory of the learning organization
suffers from frequent changes in personnel - Manpower training is less attractive (short
pay-back period) - Strong growth of management functions for control
and monitoring due to loss of trust and loyalty
(frustrating for creative people) - De-centralized wage formation workers may
appropriate part of the monopoly profits from
innovation - Continuous accumulation of incremental knowledge
in a Schumpeter II innovation model is suffering
from frequent changes of personnel
122. Knowledge on the move an industrial research
past?
- Strong focus on industrial RD a phenomenon,
characteristic of the industrial revolution. - Long before going back into the 19th Century,
experimental development work on new or improved
products and processes was carried out in
ordinary workshops - Technical progress was rapid then but techniques
were such that experience and mechanical
ingenuity enabled continued improvements to be
made as result of direct observation and
small-scale experiments and improvements. - Distinctive feature about modern, industrial RD
its scale, its scientific content and the extent
of its professional specialisation
13Characteristics of new technological change
- Clear shift in the nature of knowledge
accumulation from industrial, tight to more
undetermined outcomes, trial and error ST - Traditional industrial RD was based on
- Clearly agreed-upon criteria of progress and
ability to evaluate ex post. - Ability to hold in place, to replicate, to
imitate.from laboratory conditions to industrial
production - A strong cumulative process learn from natural
and deliberate experiments. - New technological change appears more based
upon - Flexibility, hence difficulty in establishing
replication. - Trial and error elements in research with only
ex post observed improvements, difficulty to
evaluate. - Problems of continuously changing external
environments over time, across sectors, in space.
14Users as innovators
- Particular role of users in the RD process
itself - From technically skilled, bèta users (as in
workshops) to simplicity in use - Underlying process of democratization of
innovation (Eric von Hippel) - Particular role of SSH in providing research
insights into users - not just with respect to industrial research
output - but also in particular with respect to service
delivery - Particular role of ICT with respect to
interactive services (e-business and
e-government) - European diversity of users comparable to a long
tail of diversification? - SSH research appears essential in many areas of
meta social transformations - Knowledge society, sustainable development,
mobility, migration, etc. where tight
industrial ST solutions will not do.
15Two forms of HR learning
- The Schumpeter I model is characterized by the
so-called Science-Technology-Innovation mode of
learning (Bengt-Ake Lundvall), characterised by
the dominance of the science-approach i.e.
formalisation, explicitation and codification - The Schumpeter II model is characterized by
Learning by Doing, Using and Interacting. It
refers to more experience-based, implicitly
embedded and embodied knowledge. - The old view of a UK/European Paradox Systems
with a lot of good domestic science but less
successful in innovation reflects by and large
focus on STI, neglect of DUI. - Today rather the opposite paradox?
16Globalisation HR challenge a double change in
context
- Access to elements from the science base becomes
increasingly important for firms in all sectors
calls for a strengthening of Schumpeter mode I of
dynamics - Entry of new high tech firms (grow or go)
- Most firms employ large amounts of personnel with
academic/technical degrees in natural science,
engineering, and SSH - Firms interact more closely with researchers
attached to universities or other public
research institutes. - But these changes contribute to accelerating
change and callsfor a strengthening also of the
Schumpeter mode II of learning - Interdisciplinary workgroups
- Quality circles/groups
- Systems for collecting employee proposals from
employees - Autonomous groups
- Integration of functions
173. European higher education challenges
- In the EU, the case could be made that as in the
case of trade diversion, a side effect of
economic integration on HE and research
activities within the EU has been intra-European
knowledge diversion. - Gradual move from national to European borders
Bologna, ERA, ERC most easily compared with a
research single market with as yet though very
limited mobility, let alone any structural HE
institutional change. - More concentration of research (not more
students) needed 200 US research universities,
how many in Europe? Need for more differentiation
(e.g. focus on graduate students) amongst higher
education establishments - Increased autonomy and selectivity in admissions
(US and Asian examples), more inter-disciplinarity
, changing mindset of students and staff, more
flexible employment regime
18Schumpeterian HE challenges
- Need for reform in European HE system in
direction of excellence (cost of social
cohesion), specialisation, mobility alongside the
lines of the Schumpeter mode I view - At the same time and at both research and HE
level, Europe has many high quality large
multilateral research and post-graduate research
organisations CERN, ESA, EMBL, and national
organisations CEA, Max Planck Gesellschaft, TNO,
IMEC, Fraunhofer - Little cross-country learning of the Schumpeter
mode II sort often because of lack of critical
mass, few mergers - Schumpeter mode II learning based on strong
localised learning features with links to
universities and regional smart specialisation
based on particularisation -
194. Current financial crisis Short term impact on
RD
- The current financial crisis is likely to
influence private RD investments in a number of
ways - The negative impact on profitability leads to a
focus on most innovative segments of production
at the expense of lower value added segments - Within the RD portfolio, focus will be on most
promising development areas at the expense of
longer term, more risky projects. - At employment level, likely to be labour hoarding
in RD firing of flexible temporrary employment
in production - Paradoxically, the deeper the recession, the more
likely Europe and the Netherlands might be coming
nearer to the 3 RD/GDP target in 2010!
20Longer term impacts outsourcing
- In the longer term though, a renewed focus on
possibilities of increased international and
domestic outsourcing of RD so as to further
reduce RD costs - More outsourcing of development parts to cheaper
locations - Outsourcing of existing private RD
infrastructure to local/national authorities as
common, public open innovation infrastructure - Increasing amount of basic RD activities
outsourced to (porfessional) universities
21Onshoring and smart specialisation
- Distinction between public and private RD
investments becomes less relevant, search is on
for synergies - Offshoring from private to public, public private
partnerships between universities, (semi-)public
research institutions, private firms - Onshoring from private and public attracted by
similar locational facilities - Emergence of smart specialisation clusters
- From a research perspective globally linked and
networked, - From a financial perspective based on smart
investment in locational infrastructures acting
as physical attractor for onshoring of RD
activities. -
22A new Global Knowledge Keynesianism?
- The current fire prevention of governments in
financial institutions, with the temporary
(partial) nationalisation of large national
banks, raises questions about stronger local
financial involvement in knowledge investments - Could the new financial nationalism in Europe
be considered an anchorage instrument for the
localisation of international knowledge - In HE, international outsourcing and twinning
with Southern partners as new form of more
organisationally embedded international
partnership - Imagine about 50 universities and professional
universities in the Netherlands, about a similar
number of research institutes - Formal twinning will need to be coordinated by
whom? - True internationalisation of research and higher
education
23Recherche sans frontière
- Global research issues should become fully
integrated in all applied research and HE in the
developed world. Become core part of research and
higher education institutions within an open
research without borders environment.. - At HE level integration in curricula and research
activities of university and high school
departments of global challenges - At research level, global development involves
broadening the scope of research activities to
include more systematically all users groups
(BoP), and in particular various communities of
practice. Involvement of those groups appears
increasingly essential for successful innovation.
- Particularly with respect to applied research,
including design, the possibilities of such
collaborative innovation processes will have to
involve much stronger collaboration,
interactions, and partnerships with research
communities in developing countries.