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Whats New in Australian Innovation:

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Title: Whats New in Australian Innovation:


1
Whats New in Australian Innovation First
Stage of the Australian Innovation Systems
Study Don Scott-Kemmis Director, Innovation
Management and Policy Program National Graduate
School of Management Australian National
University
2
The Australian Innovation Systems Study
  • Aims to identify and assess
  • the characteristics, strengths and weaknesses of
    Australias national innovation system.
  • the recent evolution of the Australian innovation
    system
  • the impacts of structural change, government
    policy, technological change and globalisation.
  • Supported by the
  • Australian Research Council through the ARC
    Linkage Program
  • Australian Business Foundation,
  • Department of Industry, Tourism and Resources,
  • Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and
    Forestry,
  • National Office of the Information Economy
  • CSIRO.
  • A 3 year study- this paper reports on the main
    findings of the first year of the study. Other
    Working Papers from the study available on
    request.

3
Innovation is
  • pervasive across sectors,
  • non-linear - only rarely driven directly by
    science and RD,
  • usually incremental,
  • sectorally specific,
  • often characterised by collaboration and
    interaction,
  • driven above all by technological competition
  • non-RD aspects of innovation market research,
    training and competence building, design, etc
  • Increasing systemness multi-actor,
    multicomponent, multitechnology and based on
    distributed learning

4
Innovation Systems
  • innovation is shaped by factors external to the
    firm eg institutional constraints, regulatory
    frameworks, nationally specific customs and
    habits, collaboration patterns, and processes of
    interactive learning
  • firms, related organisations, competences and
    technologies co-evolve
  • these and related phenomena are persistent over
    time and systemic in character path dependence
  • innovation is learning, so the innovation system
    can be conceptualised as the institutions and
    organizations that shape learning and competence
    building
  • many of these, even in the age of globalization,
    are national (or regional) in character and
    often the object of discretionary policy
    decisions
  • The Innovation System shapes the direction and
    level of innovative effort, the response to major
    new technological and commercial changes and the
    roles of government actors.

5
National Innovation Systems
  • Key components include
  • firms
  • the education and training systems,
  • knowledge infrastructures (universities, RD
    institutes, standards agencies, regulation
    systems, etc),
  • physical infrastructures,
  • public macro-micro policy systems.
  • In the context of the historically evolved
    industrial structures, pattern of technological
    specialization, trade and investment structure.
  • What really matters are the dynamic constraints
    and opportunities at any point in time .

6
Innovation Systems Two Approaches
  • National level innovation processes inputs and
    outputs. But how useful are traditional
    innovation indicators in the case of Australia?
  • Actor-focused studies at the sectoral, regional
    or technology level. But very little such work
    has been done in Australia
  • These approaches are complementary and
    inter-dependent

7
Australia Dynamic and Structural Issues
  •   Diversity- how to aggregate usefully?
  • several cities distant from each other.
  • temperate, tropical and semi-arid agriculture .
  • Mining -coal, iron ore, gold, aluminium, silver,
    mineral sands, nickel, diamonds.
  •   Historical legacy.
  • Import substitution regime
  • Missed the surge in manufacturing exports of the
    post-war years.
  •   Industry structure.
  • large resource sector
  • small and shrinking manufacturing esp high
    tech
  • large services sector
  • Firm size.
  • high proportion of small firms
  • Trade.
  • Low trade intensity
  • Specialisation.
  • low level of technological specialisation for a
    small economy

8
Australia's Innovation Performance Compared to
OECD Average. How useful are these aggregates?
9
The Laggard Perspective
  • The Australian economy maintains a high level of
    dependence on natural resources and is failing to
    develop new areas of specialisation and growth.
  • Recent productivity growth the result of
    one-offs micro-economic ICT
  • This performance masks underlying weaknesses in
    new firm formation and in the growth of new
    internationally competitive industries.
  • The poor performance of Australian firms in RD
    and patenting signals the weaknesses in
    management, scale and international positioning.
  • Australias declining position in high tech
    sectors indicates the extent to which Australia
    is being left behind the frontier of innovation
    and growth in the world economy.
  •       One of the lowest in the OECD in
  • BERD
  • investment in venture capital
  • International patenting activity (per mill.
    Population)
  • 80 of the top fifteen export products are
    resource-based commodities
  • with a low level of processing
  • large and growing trade deficit in ICT
    products and services

10
The Boom Perspective
  • Australia is a broadly based dynamic and flexible
    economy, diversified across markets, and
    increasingly sectors, underpinned by competitive
    domestic markets and flexible labour markets.
  • High-level human resources and strong research
    organisations facilitate the rapid uptake of new
    knowledge produced anywhere.
  • Imported knowledge and equipment combined with
    local knowledge and capability supports active
    problem solving and systems integration in a
    range of sectors generating relatively high
    levels of productivity.
  • A fast-user strategy combined with natural and
    human resources is a sound basis for future
    prosperity.
  • High and increasing productivity
  • Relatively high level of public sector RD RD
    intensity in some sectors gt the OECD av.
  • Substantial growth in niches markets in key
    manufacturing sectors telecom equipment, wine,
    boats, automobiles and components
  • Maintaining strong competitiveness in resources
    sectors through the effective application of new
    technology, including IT
  • A strong ICT services sector and high growth in
    knowledge based services
  • Rapid and broadly-based uptake of new ICT.

11
Characteristics of Australian Innovation-1
  • Regional Differences
  • and the Growing Role of ICT
  • Services now gt50 of BERD and growing.

12
Major industries (ANZSIC) engaged in RD, 2000-01
(GDP)
13
Major RD fields of technological skills (RF),
2000-01 (GDP)
14
Vic business Major RD technological skills
base (RF), 2000-01 (GDP)
15
Qld business Major RD technological skills
base (RF), 2000-01 (GDP)
16
Characteristics of Australian Innovation - 2
  • Conservative
  • Scientific strengths
  • Technological specialisation
  • Patenting behaviour
  • Specialisation in export products
  • Path Dependency
  • Increasing returns

17
Changes in revealed comparative advantage in
Australian scientific publications output in four
periods
18
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19
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20
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21
Science Linkage vs. Technology Cycle Time
(1980-2001)
22
Revealed Comparative Advantage of Australias
Exports - selected commodities1971-80, 1981-90,
1991-2000
23
Characteristics of Australian Innovation - 2
  • Conservativeness in the Innovation System
  • Summary
  • Australia is specialised in sectors that are slow
    growing and have relatively low patenting levels.
    Over the past 20 years Australia has become
    relatively more specialised in these sectors.

24
Characteristics of Australian Innovation
  • Systems Integration Plus
  • No core technology production
  • Problem solving sophisticated but often unique
  • Technology mobilisation for resource based
    industries and services
  • ICT diffusion through the innovation system

25
Some Policy Issues
  • Avoid a high tech focus
  • Recognise the role of dispersed innovation and
    problem solving- what are the drivers,
    capabilities, barriers
  • In the context of small firms and limited
    capabilities strengthen the role of
    intermediaries in knowledge diffusion and
    capability development etc
  • Demand side policies environment, health,
    security, energy, education. Leading edge
    problems to develop leading edge solutions.
  • Services innovation What are the drivers,
    capabilities, barriers
  • How do new capabilities, firms and sectors emerge
    and evolve over time in Australia? Greater
    policy research needed.

26
Policy Analysis
  • In the current AUSIS project work we are
    assessing innovation system problems at four
    levels.
  • Capability failures
  • Organisational failures
  • Network failures
  • Framework Institutional failures
  • We are also assessing three dimensions of
    performance
  • The generation and upgrading of resources (human
    resources, knowledge, networks, infrastructure)
  • Effective problem solving mobilising resources
    to address challenges.
  • Generation of diversity and options for future
    growth.
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