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Integrating Entrepreneurship and Innovation Policy the Research Perspective

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Title: Integrating Entrepreneurship and Innovation Policy the Research Perspective


1
Integrating Entrepreneurship and Innovation
Policy the Research Perspective
  • Presented by Lois Stevenson
  • At FSF, ITPS NUTEK Seminar
  • Brussels, October 10, 2006

2
Innovation production, diffusion and use of new
and economically useful knowledgeEntrepreneurshi
p the process of business start-ups and business
creation growth
  • Innovation key to competitiveness and growth
  • Entrepreneurial dynamism key to economic renewal
    and growth

3
Policy definitions
  • Innovation policy
  • the generation of new knowledge
  • making government investment in innovation more
    effective
  • enhancing diffusion of knowledge and technology
    (network interaction effects) and
  • establishing right incentives to stimulate
    private sector innovation to transform knowledge
    into commercial success
  • Entrepreneurship policy
  • creating an environment and support system to
    foster the emergence of new entrepreneurs and the
    start-up and early stage growth of new firms

4
The research problem
  • Previous disconnect between entrepreneurship and
    innovation
  • Research questions often pursed by different
    researchers
  • Separately identified as critical contributors to
    economic growth
  • Policies often designed and implemented by
    different parts of government
  • Policy making in small policy niches offers
    little opportunity for cross-policy coordination
  • Different relevant stakeholders groups
  • Convergence between/ complementarities of the two
    not being optimized
  • Entrepreneurship involves the act of innovation
  • Entry/exit activity is indicator of innovation
    performance
  • Innovation systems often do not incorporate
    entrepreneurship as a focus
  • Entrepreneurs essential to convert knowledge into
    economic and social benefits (knowledge filter
    role)
  • Innovation performance will lag without
    entrepreneurial capacity

5
Both evolutions of existing policy areas
  • Entrepreneurship policy evolved from SME policy
  • Innovation policy evolved from ST policy
  • Both in infancy stages of evolution
  • Insufficient recognition of overlaps and linkages
  • Call for more horizontality and coordination with
    other policy domains
  • Need for indicators to measure importance of
    entrepreneurship in innovation

6
Policy convergence and integration
7
Innovative entrepreneurship is e-policy type
  • Evident in Lundström/Stevenson country
    assessments (e.g., AU, IE, NL, NO, UK)
  • Policies to stimulate innovative entrepreneurship
    take different shape from those to stimulate
    general entrepreneurial activity
  • Different target groups
  • More likely to focus on knowledge environments
  • Different choice of policy instruments and
    measures
  • Ideal would be to have policies which promoted
    both generic entrepreneurship AND innovation
  • Both are critical to competitiveness at firm,
    industry and economy levels
  • Innovative entrepreneurship more effective in
    environments conducive to high levels of
    entrepreneurial activity
  • More opportunity for external knowledge
    acquisition
  • More informed entrepreneurs less trial and
    error
  • Incubation phase of start-ups takes less time
  • Higher incidence of high-growth firms

8
Comparing E-policy and I-policy
  • Similar strategic outcomes
  • Economic growth (mixed evidence lots of
    intervening variables)
  • Wealth creation
  • Different policy objectives
  • Job creation, social inclusion, poverty
    alleviation vs productivity enhancement,
    competitiveness
  • Different relevant stakeholder groups in system
  • Different target groups of policy focus
  • Uneven resource allocation
  • Different sets of measures

9
E-policy I-policy policy targets
  • Innovation policy
  • RD investments
  • Patents
  • Supply of venture capital
  • Supply of knowledge capacity
  • ST engineering graduates
  • Up-take of strategic technologies
  • Diffusion of new technologies in enterprises
  • Joint innovation activities (e.g., inter-firm
    collaboration
  • Entrepreneurship policy
  • Start-up rates
  • Growth firms
  • Supply of entrepreneurs
  • Entrepreneurship and management graduates
  • Supply of start-up capital
  • Reduction of entry barriers

10
Framework of Entrepreneurship policy areas
Policy Objectives
Create dynamic start-up market for entries and
exits
Stimulate climate and culture for entrepreneurshi
p
Stimulate more entrepreneurial activity new
businesses new entrepreneurs
Entrepreneurship education
Reduction of entry/exit barriers
Start-up financing
Start-up support (enterprise SB centres
networks)
Promotion of entrepreneurship
Target group measures
11
Framework of Innovation policy areas
Policy Objectives
Increase RD intensity foster business innovation
Stimulate climate and culture for innovation
Stimulate development, commercialization
innovative new firms spin-offs new products
technology take-up
ST entrepreneurship education
RD investment
Equity financing risk capital
Incubators, TTOs, cluster networks
Promotion of innovation
Reduction of entry/exit barriers IP rules
Target group measures
12
Benchmarking and framework determinants
13
Recent developments E-policy
  • European Charter for Small Enterprises,
    Multi-annual programmes, Lisbon Agenda
  • Improve Europes enterprise performance
  • European Agenda for Entrepreneurship
  • EU Enterprise Scoreboard
  • Benchmarks against 30 indicators (some innovation
    inputs)
  • OECD Entrepreneurship Indicators Project
  • Exploring options to define and measure
    entrepreneurship, factors that influence it, and
    impacts/ outcomes
  • Focus on data and indicators
  • Danish Consortium on Dynamic Benchmarking
  • 56 indicators associated w/ entrepreneurship,
    activity levels
  • Framework to measure entrepreneurship performance
  • Policy studies
  • Lundström Stevenson (2005) Gabr Hoffman
    (2006)

14
Recent developments I-policy
  • Creating an innovative Europe (2006)
  • Boost Europes research and innovation
    performance
  • Competitiveness and Innovation Framework
    Programme (2007-2013)
  • Some attempt to carry innovation policies to
    enterprise level and to promote both innovation
    and entrepreneurship culture
  • European TrendChart on Innovation
  • Benchmarks against indicators
  • 35 Country reports on innovation performance
  • European Commission report on Policy, Indicators
    and Targets (2005)
  • 75 indicators for 8 types of innovation policies
  • No indicators for key policies such as promote
    and sustain creation and growth of innovative
    firms
  • Policies to strengthen entrepreneurial
    innovation and encourage tech and knowledge
    transfer do not include indicators for
    entrepreneurial capacity or graduates in
    business/entrepreneurship
  • Innovation policy and performance (OECD, 2005)

15
Searching for an integrated approach to the
assessment of entrepreneurship and innovation
policy
16
Research imperative
  • Examine policies oriented to start-up and growth
    of entrepreneurial firms AND policies oriented to
    producing innovation
  • Policies, institutional arrangements for policy
    implementation, scope of policy measures, policy
    and performance indicators
  • Identify nexus between innovation policy and
    entrepreneurship policy, policy gaps and
    opportunities
  • Identify good practices in the integration of
    these policy domains leading to more positive
    performance outcomes
  • Draw lessons learned that can be applied in other
    countries
  • Consider impact of context on appropriate
    policy orientation (e.g., level of economic
    development Sweden vs China)

17
E-P Context Description 31 variables
Opportunities for entrepreneurship
Demographics and industrial structure
pop/growth and age, education, net immigration,
service sector/GDP, government taxation/GDP,
public sector share of employment
Economic performance GDP/capita GDP growth,
LF participation rate, unemployment rate,
exports
Economic Outcomes
Structure
SME entrepreneurial vitality
Density - of business owners SMEs per 1000
pop nascent self-employment SME share of
employment micro-firms and employment share,
female entrepreneurs
Dynamic annual entries, exits growth in no.
of SMEs, SME employment
Favorable context
18
I-P Context Description add variables
Demographics and industrial structure
pop/growth education, net immigration, service
sector/GDP, government taxation/GDP, public share
of employment, RD intensity (BERD, GERD, URD)
Opportunities for innovation
Economic performance GDP/capita GDP growth,
LF participation rate, unemployment rate,
exports (of high tech products)
Economic Outcomes
Structure
Innovation vitality
Density - of business owners ST graduates per
1000 pop patents per M/pop no. of spin-offs
employment in tech sectors innovative SMEs
Dynamic annual entries, exits growth
firms sales of new-to-firm new-to-market
products
Favorable context
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