Title: The European Innovation
1The European Innovation Scoreboard and Trend
Chart Third plenary meeting of Innovative
Regions in Europe Stratford-upon-Avon, 17-18 June
2002
Peter Löwe, European Commission, DG
Enterprise peter.loewe_at_cec.eu.int
2Structure of the presentation
- The evolution of EU innovation policy
- The European Innovation Scoreboard
- Lessons onIntelligent Benchmarking
- The Innovation Trend Chart
- Trends in regional innovation policy
- Future developments
3Community Innovation Policy
- The milestones
- Green Paper on Innovation (12/95)
- Innovation Action Plan (11/96)
- 5th Framework Program (12/98)
- Lisbon Summit (3/00)
- Communication (9/00)
- Innovation Scoreboard (9/01)
4The 2001 Innovation Scoreboard
- The European Innovation Scoreboard
- A request of the Lisbon Council (03/2000)
- Policy tool to compare national innovation
performances - Part of a much broader benchmarking exercise of
the Commission - Published yearly (next edition 12/2002)
- www.cordis.lu/trendchart/scoreboard
5The Innovation Scoreboard
- Methodological approach
- Data must be relevant, recent, high quality,
comparable at international level, and not cause
additional burden - Use of Eurostat data wherever possible
- Harmonisation with other scoreboards (Enterprise
RTD and, in particular with the Structural
indicators)
6The 2001 Innovation Scoreboard
- 17 indicators in four areas
- Human Resources
- Creation of new knowledge
- Transmission and application of knowledge
- Innovation finance, outputs and markets
7The 2001 Innovation Scoreboard
- Human Resources
- New SE graduates
- Population with tertiary education (R)
- Participation in life-long learning (R)
- Employment in medium-high and high-tech
manufacturing (R) - Employment in high-tech services (R)
8The 2001 Innovation Scoreboard
- Knowledge creation
- Public RD expenditures (R)
- Business RD expenditures (R)
- EPO High-tech patent applications (R)
- USPTO High-tech patent applications
9The 2001 Innovation Scoreboard
- Transmission and application of knowledge
- SMEs innovating in-house
- SMEs involved in innovation co-operation
- Innovation expenditures
10The 2001 Innovation Scoreboard
- Innovation finance, -output and -markets
- High-tech venture capital
- Capital raised on parallel markets plus by new
firms on main markets - New-to-market products
- Home internet access
- Share of ICT markets
- Share of manufacturing value-added in high-tech
sectors
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13The 2001 Innovation Scoreboard
- Some main lessons from the scoreboard
- The union as a whole lags behind US and JAP
- Most relevant gaps BERD and hi-tech patents
- But EU leaders are often also world leaders
- Private RD S FIN D
- Public RD FIN NL S
- SE graduates UK F IRL
- Home internet access NL S DK
- High potential for MS to learn from each other
14The 2001 Innovation Scoreboard
Significant Differences between EU countries
Coefficient of variation among EU countries
High variation between Member States are shown in
red
15The 2001 Innovation Scoreboard
The performances of Member States are diverging
Coefficient of variation among EU countries
Divergence between Member States are shown in red
16The 2001 Innovation Scoreboard
Overall Country Trends by Innovation Index
17Intelligent Benchmarking
- Just copying is not intelligent
- The PISA example
- Mobilisation through naming and shaming
- But policies are embedded in national context
- The transfer dilemma
- Benchmarking no substitute for debate
- Systems approach address weak points
- Path dependency set system specific goals
18The Innovation Trend Chart
- Three complementary instruments
- European Innovation Scoreboard
- 17 indicators based on available statistics
- Analysis of Innovation Policy Measures
- Data base of 729 schemes on the web
- Country reports Trend reports
- Consultation of Policy Makers at the EU level
- Peer reviews on specific themes
19The second pillar of the Trend Chart
Data base of 729 innovation policy schemes
- Italy 37
- Luxembourg 7
- Netherlands 41
- Portugal 29
- Spain 29
- Sweden 19
- UK 57
- Total EU 518
- Austria 43
- Belgium 49
- Denmark 15
- Finland 16
- France 27
- Germany 70
- Greece 51
- Ireland 28
20The second pillar of the Trend Chart
Data base of 729 innovation policy schemes
- Slovak Republic 3
- Slovenia 8
- Total CC 174
- Associated Countries
- Iceland 3
- Israel 5
- Norway 29
- Total AC 37
- Grd Total 729
- Candidate Countries
- Cyprus 23
- Czech Republic 11
- Estonia 17
- Hungary 28
- Latvia 45
- Lithuania 14
- Poland 7
- Romania 18
21The Innovation Trend Chart
- Trends in national/regional policy interaction
- PT and IRL Gradual decentralisation of funds and
structures - FR Need for better national/regional
co-ordination acknowledged - ES and BE decentralisation sometimes perceived
as excessive - DE Federal level launches competitive actions
for regions
22The third pillar of the Trend Chart
- Peer reviews of innovation policies
- Events should be focussed on themes that are both
specific and of common interest - To understand the specific conditions for which
policies have been developed - Extract relevant schemes from the database
- Countries identify their own good practices
- Explain how they measure progress
- Agree on target setting and follow-up
23The Innovation Trend Chart
- Peer reviews of innovation policies in 2002
- Spin-offs from universities and PRIs
- Corporate tax and innovation
- Innovation policies in candidate countries
- Life-long learning and innovation
- Evaluations and trans-national policy learning
- See http//trendchart.cordis.lu/Benchmarking/inde
x.cfm?
24Future Developments
- Scoreboard 2002 Regional data available for
- Tertiary education
- Lifelong learning
- Medium-high and high-tech manuf. employment
- High-tech service employment
- Public RD
- Business RD
- High-tech patents
25Future Developments
- Main lessons
- Commitment at highest level (trans-national
policy learning needs resources) - Dont overemphasise statistics understand what
your indicators really measure - Use complementary tools (statistics information
gathering peer reviews) - Concentrate on what is under your control
- Goals in the group can be different but there
must be (measurable) goals