National specificities in development and economic policy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

National specificities in development and economic policy

Description:

Temporarily increasing returns underlie economic growth ... and Italy are specialised in chemistry, physics, mathematics; USA wide spread ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:64
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: areins
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: National specificities in development and economic policy


1
National specificities in development and
economic policy
  • ESST Module 4 Unit 4
  • Andreas Reinstaller

2
Shedding light on our ignorance some core
findings of the last lectures
  • Technical change
  • Temporarily increasing returns underlie economic
    growth
  • Technological change and innovation are main
    determinants of productivity growth
  • Technology diffusion crucially affects economic
    growth
  • Technical change and productivity gains are
    accompanied by
  • Changes in skill requirements (human capital)
  • Organisational change (changes of routines and
    heuristics technological regimes)
  • Innovation
  • Innovation depends on scientific progress
  • Firms are important actors, but do not act alone
  • Innovation requires more than RD
  • Innovation is a creative and interactive process
    involving market and non-market institutions
  • Competitive markets are necessary but not
    sufficient condition for innovativeness
  • Network externalities, dynamics economies of
    scale are key sources of increasing returns
  • Misleading perceptions of the state of the world
    (by firms) leads to the process of creative
    destruction industrial dynamics

3
How is knowledge produced the linear model of
Science Technology Innovation (STI)
Science (basic and applied), research and
development (knowledge production)
Schools, universities, vocational
education (knowledge mediation)
Production of commodities (knowledge application)
4
Example of a linear model How Research is viewed
in the Endogenous Growth Model by Aghion and
Howitt (1992)
Implication No feedback loop technical change
is a linear development. Society plays only
insofar a role as provides the means for
investment. every new design/innovation is used
and contributes to growth.
5
The generation of new knowledge as social
construction evolutionary reasoning
Research and Development
Knowledge, learning by doing
Potential markets
Sales and Marketing
redesign and production
invention /design
Boundary spanning conditions
From Kline, S. J. and Rosenberg, N. (1986), An
Overview on Innovation, in Landau, R. and
Rosenberg, N. (eds), The Positive Sum Strategy,
National Academy Press Washington DC, pp.
275-306
6
The meso-level firm networks and clusters
  • Most important types of firm networks
  • Supplier networks
  • Marketing networks
  • RD Networks

7
The effects of networking
8
Why? Network topology and diffusion of information
  • Small world networks increase diffusion speed of
    knowledge and while keeping the own (research)
    group homogeneous (i.e. cliquish).
  • New knowledge is brought into the group from
    outside, thus increasing the variety
  • Group remains homogeneous so that intense
    interaction variety speed up integration of new
    knowledge into the research group

Graphics taken from R.Cowan and N.Jonard (2000),
MERIT Research Memorandum RM2000-018
9
Network characteristics cliques
  • Cliques core networks with high direct and
    indirect interaction (thus knowledge flows) of
    path-length n (multiplicity) - in this case
    between firms

10
The macro-level National innovation systems (i)
  • a set of distinctive institutions which jointly
    and individually contribute to the development
    and diffusion of new technologies and which
    provide the framework within which governments
    form and implement policies to influence the
    innovation process. As such it is a system of
    interconnected institutions to create, store and
    transfer the knowledge, skills and artefacts
    which define new technologies, J.S. Metcalfe
    (1995), The foundations of Technology Policy
    Equilibrium and Evolutionary perspectives, in
    P. Stoneman, Handbook of the Economics of
    Innovation and Technical Change, Blackwell,
    London (emphasis added)

11
National Innovation Systems II
12
The linkage structure of NISs
  • An NIS consists of institutions,
  • that formulate policy goals and co-ordinate
    (govt. agencies)
  • that finance and fund R D (science funds,
    special loan programmes, etc)
  • that act as bridge between decision making and
    fund redistribution research councils and
    associations
  • that are responsible for knowledge creation
    private RD labs, universities
  • That forster diffusion technology transfer and
    diffusion, promotion of technology-based firms,
    human resource mobility
  • Facts
  • The degree of complexity of modern technology
    requires a) specialisiation AND b)
    cross-disciplinary cooperation
  • Technology becomes more science based (science
    based patents increased from 17000 in 1987 to
    gt50000 1994)
  • Labour is the most powerful transmission
    mechanism of tacit knowledge
  • Policy instruments for high growth and
    innovativeness goal
  • Different depending on
  • industrial structure,
  • degree of development of knowledge creation
    institutions
  • given strength of science technology linkages

13
A first analytical step the specialisation
pattern of a NIS
  • Where lies the intellectual and technological
    strength of a nation?
  • How does knowledge generation change in reaction
    to new policies, technological innovation, etc. ?
  • ? Revealed Technological Advantage (RTA)
  • Science e.g. France, Germany and Italy are
    specialised in chemistry, physics, mathematics
    USA wide spread
  • Engineering e.g. Austria, Netherlands, Nordic
    countries, UK specialisation in clinical
    medicine

14
Emerging Specialisation Patterns Science
15
Emerging Specialisation Patterns Patenting
16
NIS Country similarities
17
NIS strength of science technology linkages
18
The institutional level relating performance to
institutions the organisation of an NSI
  • For a detailed discussion of relation between
    institutional settings and economic performance
    see OECD (1999), Managing National Systems of
    Innovation, Paris
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com