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Comprehensive Overview of Competitiveness and National Innovation Systems

Explore the link between competitiveness and innovation, definitions, measures, and policies. Understand absolute, comparative, and competitive advantages, along with the role of National Innovation Systems. Learn about key measures and the importance of innovation policies in enhancing a country's competitiveness. Discover case studies such as Finland's innovation system.

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Comprehensive Overview of Competitiveness and National Innovation Systems

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  1. Competitiveness and National Innovation Systems Dr. Lisa De Propris Birmingham Business School Institute for Economic Development Policy

  2. Content • Link between competitiveness and innovation • Measures and indexes • Cross-country rankings • National innovation system • Policies

  3. Definition EU “Ability of the economy to provide its population with high and rising standard of living and high rates of employment on a sustainable basis.” European Commission, 2002:2 Knowledge + Innovation ProductivityCompetitiveness “knowledge, innovation and entrepreneurship as key factors affecting industrial competitiveness” EC, Competitiveness 2003

  4. Definition OECD Competitiveness is the degree to which a country can “under free and fair market conditions, produce goods and services which meet the test of international markets, while simultaneously maintaining and expanding real incomes of its people in the long run” (OECD, Technology and the Economy: The Key Relationship, 1992)

  5. Definition WEF “competitiveness is defined as that collection of factors, policies and institutions which determine the level of productivity of a country and that, therefore, determine the level of prosperity that can be attained by an economy” (WEF, 2005:xiii)

  6. Definitions “true competitiveness is measured by productivity”. (DTI-UK, 2003:7) “national competitiveness is the capacity to increase the real income of all Americans by producing high-value products and services that meet the test of world markets” (Council on Competitiveness-US, 2001)

  7. Absolute, comparative & competitive advantages • Absolute advantages: specialisation in the production of goods one country can produce more efficiently that any other • Comparative advantages: specialisation in the production of goods for which a country has the greatest relative advantage • Competitive advantages: (Porter’s diamond),cost advantage and differentiation advantages

  8. Measures of competitiveness • Trade = real exchange rate = exports • Productivity (labour, capital total factor) • GDP per capita- income • Composite indexes of e.g. innovation, human capital

  9. World Economic ForumThe Global Competitive Report 2005-06 Growth Competitiveness Index Macro-economy Public institutions Tech & Innovation Policies Regulatory framework Global Competitiveness Index • Institutions • Infrastructure • Macro-economy • Health and primary education • Higher education and training • Market efficiency • Technology readiness • Business environment • Innovation

  10. UNIDO, Industrial Development Report 2002-03

  11. UNIDO, Industrial Development Report 2002-03

  12. National Innovation Systems “ set of interrelated agents, institutions and practices that constitute, perform and participate in relevant ways in the process of technological innovation” • Firms do not innovate in isolation • A country’s technology and innovation capability determines its competitiveness • Local-regional-national systems of innovation are connected • NIS are not closed system

  13. National Innovation Systems National coordination policy/instruments, service provision, funding, setting up the legal framework Innovation incremental/radical innovations; new to firms/new to markets System • innovation is a process involving firms and institutions/organisation • Linkages (cooperation, production exchanges) • Knowledge flows Measures: formal and informal cooperation over R&D, stock of research institutions, channels of dissemination and technology transfer, R&D expenditure, R&D performance, human capital

  14. National Innovation Policy • Link universities/public labs and businesses especially for science-based industries • Encouraging cooperation over innovation • Finance (venture capital, risk-taking banks) • Military spending in R&D and procurement • National programme in high tech sectors HOWEVER, • Picking sectors  winners • Duplication of efforts • Competition for resources (EU-wide science and research programme)

  15. Finland • Top Growth Competitiveness Index ranking 2005 • Is it only for Nokia? NO Nokia grew in a innovative environment  Finnish innovation system INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK • 21 universities • 16 knowledge centre (EU sponsored) • Tech Development Centre • Tech Research Centre of F. • National cluster programmes coordinated across 5 ministries FUNDING • Finnish national fund for R&D (sponsors regional tech centres and arranges venture capital funds) • Regional development fund

  16. NETWORKING • Across national agencies • Across national and regional agencies • Between agencies and businesses (including start-up firms) There exists a global communications technology industry Trans-national innovation system (linkages, cooperations, sub-contracting, in-outwards FDI

  17. Finnish institutional framework

  18. Reading List M. Balzat and H. Hanusch (2004) Recent Trends in the Research on National Innovation Systems, Journal of Evolutionary Economics, Vol. 14. EC (2005) EU Sectorial Competitiveness, Luxemburg, Official Publication of the European Communities. EC (2003) Competitiveness: Internal market, industry and research, (document 9039/03) http://ue.eu.int EC (2004) European Competitiveness Report 2004, Luxemburg, Official Publication of the European Communities. R.R. Nelson (1993) National innovation systems, OUP, Oxford. Interamerican Development Bank (2001) The Innovation Systems of Latin America and the Caribbean, Working paper #460 Oinas P. (2005) “Finland: a Success Story?” European Planning Studies, 13/8 Porter M.E., K. Schwab and A. Lopez-Claros (2005) The Global Competitiveness Report 2005-05, World Economic Forum www.weforum.org Porter M. (1990) The competitive advantage of nations, London, Macmillan. Porter M. (1985) Competitive Advantage, London, Free Press. Porter M.E. and H.M. Ketels (2003) UK Competitiveness: Moving to the Next Stage, DTI Economic Paper No. 3, Department of Trade and Industry World Bank, 2002, Building Competitive Firms: Incentives and Capabilities (www.worldbank.org) World Economic Forum (2002) The Latin American Competitiveness Report 2001-02, Oxford University Press

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