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Innovation and Risk Management

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Free markets tend to underinvest in knowledge ... Precision engineering. Old economy. Net operating surplus. Wages. Source: Commerce Department ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Innovation and Risk Management


1
Innovation and Risk Management
  • Three Policy Challenges

Jonathan West University of Tasmania
2
Challenge 1Free markets tend to underinvest in
knowledge
  • Free markets undermine appropriability of returns
    from investment in basic research.
  • Especially true for free labor markets.
  • Reliance on markets to drive research will lead
    to underinvestment, and failure.
  • Paradox The more perfect are the markets for
    knowledge and labor, the greater must be the role
    of not-for-profits and government.

3
Australia has fallen behind in science.
4
Population required to generate one patent
USA 2,955 Japan 3,914 Switzerland 5,244 Taiwan
5,812 Canada 8,227 Germany 8,778 South
Korea 13,653 France 14,658 United
Kingdom 16,568 Australia 22,169 Singapore 25,73
5 Spain 127,273 Argentina 778,261 Mexico 1,267,
532 Brazil 1,869,318 India 10,647,319 Indonesia
21,610,345
5
Challenge 2Innovation has become more complex
  • Auto components 1920--1500 2003--30,000.
  • Aircraft components 1945--20,000 2003
    3,500,000.
  • Handgun components 51 (musket) 140 (rifle).
  • Chip transistors 1970--1000 1980--100,000
    2003--100,000,000.
  • Software operating system, lines of code
    1980--10,000 2003--80,000,000.
  • PBX interconnects 1950--10002
    1990--100,000,0002.

6
therefore demanding more resources
7
and broader diversification to manage risk.
  • The higher the risk, the broader the base over
    which risk must be diversified
  • Low-risk, low-potential businesses funded by
    family and friends.
  • Example Barbershops and building contractors.
  • Higher risk technology businesses funded by
    venture capital.
  • Example Information technology.
  • Most intense and broadest risk underwritten by
    government.
  • Example Commercial aircraft.

8
Frontier technology can induce severe risk.
Number of projects to ensure probability of one
launch
33,333
10,000
100
20
5
2
Probability of market introduction from stage
.003
.01
1
5
20
50
9
Risk management in life sciences
  • Number of projects needed to start at
    Preclinicals to ensure probability of one success
    through Phase II
  • 50.
  • Number of projects needed to start at
    Preclinicals to ensure probability of success
    through Phase III
  • 100.
  • Minimum portfolio value to ensure one launch
    through Phase II
  • US500m.
  • Minimum portfolio value to ensure one launch
    through phase III
  • US1.5b.
  • (Assume 500m Phase III 20m Phase II 10m
    Phase I 2m Preclinicals)

10
Institutional division of labor in risk management
11
Challenge 3Innovation value is increasingly not
captured in wages
Source Commerce Department
12
Implication
  • A national strategy aimed at attracting
    foreign-owned companies wont enable sufficient
    value capture to recoup the public and private
    investments needed to become technologically
    competent.
  • Local entrepreneurship, and long-term equity
    ownership, is essential.
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