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Investing in Tomorrow: Approaches to Building Techbased Economies

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Title: Investing in Tomorrow: Approaches to Building Techbased Economies


1
Investing in TomorrowApproaches to
BuildingTech-based Economies
  • Presentation by
  • Dan Berglund
  • President and CEO
  • March 30, 2006

2
State Science and Technology Institute
  • Mission
  • Enhance initiatives, particularly those at the
    state level, that encourage economic growth
    through the application of science and technology
  • Advance cooperation in science and technology
    between the states and the federal government
  • Funders
  • Kauffman Foundation
  • MEP, EDA
  • More than 30 states and 100 universities,
    cities, and TBED organizations

3
Kentucky vs. North Carolina
4
  • ...we are actually in the middle of two
    struggles right now. One is against the Islamist
    terrorists in Iraq and elsewhere, and the other
    is a competitiveness-and-innovation struggle
    against India, China, Japan and their neighbors.
    And while we are fixated on the former..., we are
    completely ignoring the latter.
  • Thomas Friedman
  • New York Times
  • April 22, 2004

5
The world and the U.S.
  • In the mid-1990s, the European Commission
    reported that Europe surpassed the U.S. in the
    mid-1990s as the worlds largest producer of
    scientific literature
  • Between 1980 and 2003, South Korea, Taiwan and
    Japan went from 12 percent of US patents to 26
    percent
  • Physical Review, a series of physics journals,
    reported that American papers fell from 61
    percent to 1983 to 29 percent in 2003
  • New York Times, May 3, 2004

6
U.S. in a Global Environment
  • By 2000, the global economic world expanded to
    encompass 6 billion people. As a result of this
    widening, another roughly 1.5 billion new workers
    entered the global economic labor force.True,
    maybe only 10 percent of this new 1.5
    billion-strong workforce entering the global
    economy have the education and connectivity to
    collaborate and compete at a meaningful level.
    But this is still 150 million people, roughly the
    size of the entire U.S. workforce.
  • Microsoft has a saying about its research center
    in Beijing, Remember, in China when you are one
    in a million there are 1,300 other people just
    like you.
  • in the 1980s and 90s, two-thirds of workers
    who lost jobs in manufacturing industries hit by
    overseas competition earned less on their next
    job. A quarter of workers who lost their jobs and
    were reemployed saw their income fall 30 percent
    or more.

7
China
  • SE degrees now represent 60 percent of all
    bachelors degrees earned in China vs. 31 percent
    in U.S.
  • By 2010, China will surpass both Japan and the EU
    in RD expenditures and be at 80 percent of the
    U.S. level by 2012 Chinas GDP will equal the
    United States
  • At the heart of the imbalances in the Chinese
    economyis an unsustainable investment boom that
    has been in the making for at least four years
    and that will probably take at least several
    years to undo.
  • the divide between rich and poor is greater
    than before the peasant-led revolution that
    brought the Communist Party to power in 1949.
  • Three transitions 1) from communism to market
    system, 2) hundreds of millions from country to
    city, and 3) where stability and duty once
    reigned, risk-taking is now the order of the
    day.

8
China Demographics
  • In 2004, those 60 and over make up 11 percent of
    population in 2040, they will make up 28 percent
  • In Europe, the elder share of the population
    passed 10 percent in the 1930s and will reach 30
    percent in the 2030s (a century) it will take
    China single generation to do that
  • The Graying of the Middle Kingdom
  • As reported by FuturePundit.com/archives/002075.ht
    ml

9
Who Cares About Trade Deficits?
  • In broad schematic terms, the United States
    imports and the rest of the world exports the
    United States borrows and the rest of the world
    lends. Financial flows are so lopsided that last
    year America soaked up nearly three-fourths of
    the surplus savings in the entire world.
  • 600 billion a year in loans to the United
    States. Without that injection of borrowed money,
    the United States would be hard-pressed to fund
    both consumer credit and its huge budget deficit.
    Interest rates would rise, making consumption
    more expensive.

10
U.S. Workforce
  • Among adults 25-34, U.S. is ninth among
    industrialized nations in share of population
    with at least a high school degree
  • Among adults 25-34, U.S. is tied with Belgium for
    seventh in share of people who hold a college
    degree
  • As recently as 20 years ago, U.S. was first in
    both
  • 40 percent of ninth-graders nationwide go on to
    graduate from high school and immediately enroll
    in college

11
Calls for Action
  • Council on Competitiveness Innovate America
  • AeA Losing the Competitive Advantage?
  • Task Force on the Future of American Innovation
    The Knowledge Economy
  • SACI Advisory Committee
  • NAS Rising Above the Storm
  • A coalition is calling for a doubling of
    engineering, math and science grads in the next
    10 years.
  • Coalition includesAeA, the Business Roundtable,
    the Council on Competitiveness, the Semiconductor
    Industry Alliance, TechNet and the
    Telecommunication Industry Alliance

12
Elements for Tech Cluster
  • Intellectual infrastructure
  • Spillovers of knowledge
  • from universities
  • from informal networks
  • Physical infrastructure
  • Technically skilled workforce
  • Capital
  • Entrepreneurial culture
  • Quality of life
  • Source Regional Advantage by Annalee Saxenian

13
ST Indicators for NE
  • Per capita personal income
  • Ranked 33rd in percent change from 1999-2004
  • Stayed at 26th
  • Business churning, 2003
  • Ranked 45th
  • Percent of Population (25Up) w bachelors, 2002
  • Ranked 19th
  • Brain Gain, 1995-2000
  • Ranked 35th w loss of 4,211
  • SBIR Phase I Awards, 2001-04
  • Ranked 47th w 29 awards
  • Per capita RD in 2003
  • 38th w 409
  • US was 954
  • Industrial RD Intensity, 2003
  • 39th with 0.56 of GSP
  • US was 1.81
  • Academic RD exp from Industry, 2003
  • 5th w industry as source w 7.31
  • US was 5.40
  • RD mix in 2003 varied from US avg
  • Indus performed 51.1 (vs. US 71.4)
  • Univ coll performed 42.4 (vs. US 14.4)
  • Feds performed 5.8 (vs. US 7.9)

14
Intellectual infrastructure activities
  • Strengthen states higher education system RD
    capacity
  • Example Kentuckys Bucks for Brains
  • Invest in basic research in hopes of seeding
    economic development and new industries
  • Example Californias Embryonic Stem Cell
    Institute
  • Invest in higher ed in areas of industrial
    relevance
  • Example Georgia Research Alliance
  • Invest in areas to diversify economy
  • Example Michigans Life Sciences Corridor, Prop
    301
  • Encourage greater university-industry interaction
  • Example Ohios Thomas Edison Program

15
Spillovers of Knowledge
  • Identify and remove barriers to commercialization
    of university-developed technology
  • Example Oklahoma and Oregon
  • Encourage commercialization of university-develope
    d technology
  • Example Utahs Centers of Excellence
  • Encourage commercialization of federal lab
    technology
  • Example Technology Ventures Corporation
  • Provide seed funding to industry associations and
    technology councils
  • Examples MD, VA, and WA more than 200 groups

16
Spillovers of Knowledge
  • Improve competitiveness of existing manufacturers
  • Example Manufacturing Extension Partnership

17
Physical Infrastructure
  • Research parks
  • Example Centennial Park
  • Examine quality of infrastructure
  • Example e-Com Ohio, ConnectKentucky
  • Improve it through public or private action
  • Example Berkshire Connect, e-NC, Philadelphia

18
Technically Skilled Workforce
  • Increase exposure to math science in K-12
  • Example Maines Laptops for 7th graders
  • Encourage more students to enter SE fields
  • Examples SciTech Scholars and GI Bill for the
    New Economy in Pennsylvania
  • Subsidize tuition for undergraduate education
  • Example Hope Scholarships
  • Training for workers in technology-based
    companies
  • Example Marylands Partnership for Workforce
    Quality

19
Capital
  • Use state funds to invest in technology companies
  • Example Massachusetts Technology Development
    Corporation
  • Use state funds to leverage private funds to
    invest in technology companies
  • Example Maryland Venture Capital Trust
  • Encourage angel investing
  • Example Arizona angel investor tax credit
  • Provide assistance to companies to access
    financing sources
  • Examples Oklahoma Tech Comm Center, Venture
    capital conferences, SBIR assistance

20
Entrepreneurial Culture
  • Improve survival rate of start-up companies
  • Example Ohios Edison Incubators
  • Work intensively with entrepreneurs to develop
    their businesses
  • Example Oklahoma Technology Commercialization
    Corp.
  • Recruiting management talent
  • Examples Kentucky, BFTP/Central
  • One-stop resource directory
  • Example AzTechBizDev.com

21
Observations Lessons Learned
  • Committed high-level leadership is required that
    understands
  • Economic impact further down the road than other
    approaches
  • Research does not always succeed
  • Significant cultural differences between actors
  • Action should be based on
  • Understanding of needs, capabilities, and gaps
  • Filling gaps to encourage change in private
    sector behavior

22
Observations Lessons Learned (cont.)
  • Scale and structure of investment matters
  • Undertake only those activities that you can do
    well
  • Metrics for programs should be established at the
    onset
  • Funding should be competitive with any funding
    going to companies made as investments rather
    than grants
  • Operation of programs through non-governmental
    intermediaries permits greater flexibility of
    action
  • Should be industrially driven (where appropriate)

23
Observations Lessons Learned (cont.)
  • Characteristics of successful TBED programs
  • Three hallmarks for long-term sustainability
  • Do good work
  • Measure whether theyre doing good work
  • Telling people theyre doing good work
  • Champions from more than one sector (ideally all
    three)
  • Private sector, university, government (gov or
    legislature)
  • Effective management and staff
  • Portfolio of programs that covers the pipeline of
    ideas or close integration with other programs
  • Entrepreneurial in approach/responding to change

24
A Closing Thought
  • In China today, Bill Gates is Britney Spears. In
    America today, Britney Spears is Britney Spears
    and that is our problem.
  • World is Flat, p. 265

25
Contact Information
  • For more information, contact
  • Dan Berglund
  • State Science Technology Institute
  • 614/901-1690
  • berglund_at_ssti.org
  • To sign up for SSTI Weekly Digest go to
  • http//www.ssti.org
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