Title: Enhancing Innovation Capacity
1Enhancing Innovation Capacity
Tugrul Temel Department of Economics and
Development Research Institute Tilburg
University April 5, 2007
2Outline
- Background and Literature
- Conceptual framework
- The problem situation
- Applications
- The way forward
3Background
- Subject is Information Knowledge (I-K)
- I-K in growth models innovation systems
- Institutions ICT use for innovation capacity
development - Innovation capacities for interactive learning
4Literature
- The Solow-Swan model (1956)
- Endogenous growth (Romer 1990)
- RD as a choice variable
- In RD-based models, innovation drives growth
- RD externalities increases economy-wide
knowledge stock - Evolutionary growth (Nelson, Winter 1974)
- role of institutions, path-dependency,
uncertainty - dynamic firm-specific capabilities rather than
RD - difficulty in measuring capacities at the
aggregate level
5Literature
- National Innovation Systems
- Freeman 1987 Lundvall 1992 Nelson 1993 Patel
and Pavitt 1994 Metcalfe 1995 - Common points
- organizations interact in knowledge or technology
generation, diffusion use - rules regulations pattern their interactions
6The Problem Situation
- Evolution
- Global/regional networks for I-K exchange
- From individual orgs to networks of orgs
- Agr research systems viewed within innovation
systems - Implications for individual orgs
- Link innovation strategies to wider ST policies
- Establish partnerships with private enterprises
- Exploit ICT for better interaction with I-K
networks
7The problem situationI-K flow among a broad
range of actors
P
R
B
FX
I
M
Pr
C
X
8Conceptual Framework
9Agricultural Innovation System (AIS)
-
-
- A set of public and private organizations that
jointly and/or individually lead to valuable
changes in agriculture when information
knowledge are made available and are put into
socially and economically productive use. -
10Components of an AIS
- Agricultural POLICY, legislative, regulatory
structure - Ministries, regulatory enforcement
agencies - Agricultural Science Technology KNOWLEDGE Base
- Agr Univ, Res-Ext orgs, NGOs for indigenous
knowledge - MARKET System - Farmers, Agro-processors, input
suppliers, marketing agents, consumers - EXTERNAL Sector - Donors, International RD Orgs
- Goal to reduce poverty food insecurity
11Assumptions of AIS
- I-K central to economic growth development
- Interactions critical for I-K flow org.
learning - Learning as important as direct investment in
RD - Innovations take place everywhere in society
12Innovation Capacities
- Absorptive capacity is strong if I-K receivers
are competent. - Linkage capacity is strong if actors in AIS are
linked and interact. - Competition capacity is strong if actors invest
in human capital and learning.
13Institutions
- rules of the game or humanly devised constraints
that structure human interaction (North, 1996)
14Institutions create an enabling environment for
capacity development
- secure the benefits from investment in I-K
- improve rate of I-K generation, diffusion, use
- shape the innovation process by managing
- conflicts (i.e., IPR, enforcement)
- information supply (i.e. labeling regulations)
- uncertainty (i.e. governance of natural resources)
15ICT facilitates capacity development
ICT use enhances the rate of I-K absorption,
exchange and use. ICT penetrates into the
innovation system when absorptive, linkage
competition capacities are strong.
16Application 1Information and Knowledge Flow
- Mapping I-K flow in the AIS
- Components policy (P), research (R), education
(E), credit (C), extension information (I),
private enterprises (M), farming (F), consultancy
(D) and external (X) - Characterizing the AIS
- Policy recommendations
17Application 1Information and Knowledge Flow
P
R
B
FX
I
M
Pr
C
X
18Application 1Cause-effect structure of the AIS
19Application 2ICT use in Georgia
- Goal assess ICT infrastructure use to
facilitate AIS for HV sector - Objective identify pivotal orgs to establish an
IEN - Rationale weak market participation due to weak
I-K exchange - Constraints Government is not transparent
pluralistic information flow has not been a
tradition - Data collection questionnaire Needs Assessment
Interviews
20Application 2 Information Exchange Network
P
PM
R
B
FX
I
Information flow by Face to Face Meetings Mass
Media (Radio, Newspapers, TV, Magazines)
Internet/Web Telephony, Call Centers
Information Exchange Network
M
Pr
C
X
21The way forward
- So far a methodology developed
- To characterize the AIS
- To assess ICT use
- Now the challenge is to assess
- the influence of I-K related institutions and ICT
use on innovation capacity - the effect of changes in innovation capacity on
the functioning of the innovation system
22Survey Design Measurement
- Survey of organizations in the innovation system
- Absorption, linkage, competition capacities -
skills and qualifications of human resources,
networking capacity, ICT use in I-K exchange - Org innovation