Prof Cunningham

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1 Patrick Cunningham Chief Scientific Adviser to the Government Ballyhoura Development Ltd, Nov12, 2010 Building the Knowledge Economy

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Transcript of Prof Cunningham

Page 1: Prof Cunningham

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Patrick Cunningham

Chief Scientific Adviser to the Government

Ballyhoura Development Ltd, Nov12, 2010

Building the Knowledge Economy

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“to become the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world, capable of sustainable economic growth with more and better jobs and greater social cohesion.”

3% of GDP on R&D1/3 public; 2/3 business

Lisbon Agenda (2000)

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“Ireland by 2013 will be internationally renowned for the excellence of its research, and will be to the forefront in generating and using new knowledge for economic and social progress, within an innovation driven culture.”

SSTI vision (2006)

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17762007

2006

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Rich: $439k

The Wealth of Nations:capital per person

Poor: $7k

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Source: Where is the Wealth of Nations?World Bank , 2006.

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Human & Social83%

Produced14%

Natural3%

Ireland’s Wealth

Source: Where is the Wealth of Nations? World Bank , 2006. 6

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0

5

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55-64 45-54 35-44 25-34

Age Group

%

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5

10

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25

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55-64 45-54 35-44 25-34

Age Group

%

OECD

Ireland

% of 25-34 Age Group with Tertiary Education

Source: Education at a Glance, OECD, 2008.

1976 1986 1996 2006

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The Tiger Years

1990 1995 2000 2007

€60Bn

€40Bn

€20BnTraditional

Manufacturing

Internationally-tradedServices

ModernManufacturing

Source: Forfás, 2008

Sal

es

Roots:

EU / EuroTaxEducation

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-12%

-10%

-8%

-6%

-4%

-2%

0%

2%

Global Economy

US EU Ireland

Sources: International Monetary Fund;Central Bank of Ireland

Depth of Global Recession

Decline inGDP(GNP)

for 2009

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Benefits to Society: Employment, Health, Quality of Life

Business

Research

Publications,Citations

Patents

Capital Investment,Start-ups

Money IdeasPeople

Public

Research &Development

Patents

Money IdeasPeople

New/ImprovedProcesses,

Products, Services. New/Improved Processes, Products, Services.

MoneyPeople

Collaboration

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GDP per capita

Source: International Monetary Fund, 2009

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GDP per capita and Human Development Index

Sources: International Monetary Fund, 2009, Human Development Report, UN Development Programme

Correlation = 0.90

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GDP per capita and Satisfaction with Life Index

Sources: International Monetary Fund, 2009; White, A. (2007). A Global Projection of Subjective Well-being: A Challenge To Positive Psychology? Psychtalk 56, 17-20

Correlation = 0.85

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GDP per capita and Happy Planet Index

Sources: International Monetary Fund, 2009, Happy Planet Index 2.0 from the New Economic Foundation (nef)

Correlation = 0.35

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GDP per capita and GINI Coefficient

Sources: International Monetary Fund, 2009, Human Development Report, UN Development Programme

Correlation = 0.22

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0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

3,000

1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

current €m

Investment in R&D (GERD)

1.66% GNP

Private

1.41% GNP

Source: derived from Forfás data

Public

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200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

€m constant prices (2007)

Public Investment in R&D*

-15%**

* GBAORD - Government budget appropriations or outlays on R&D.** Indicative only: SSTI relative to 2008, 2009 (nominal), respectively. Source: Forfás, DETE, 2009

NDP 2000-2006Total = €4B

NDP 2007-2013Total = €8.2B

-4%**

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?

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Capital 12%

Education 13%

SSTI 1%

Social Welfare 33%

Health 24%

Justice 4%

Agriculture 2%

Enterprise 2%

Other 9%

Sources: Revised Estimates for Public Services, DF, April 2009; SSTI Finances, DETE, May 2009

Exchequer Expenditure 2009 (~€60 bn)

Investment for the future

Spending for today

Seedcorn

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Gross Domestic Expenditure on R&D as % GDP

Source: Annual Competitiveness Report Vol. 1, NCC, August 2009

Ireland ranks 18th

out of OECD 28

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European Innovation Scoreboard - Inputs

Human Resources S&E, SSH Primary Graduates S&E, SSH PhD Graduates Pop. with Tertiary Education Life-long Learning Youth Education Attainment

Finance & Support Public R&D Expenditure Venture Capital Private Credit Firms with Broadband

Linkages & Entrepreneurship SMEs Innovating In-house Innovative SMEs Collaborating Firm Renewal Public-Private Co-publications

Throughputs EPO Patents Community Trademarks Community Designs Technology Balance of Payments

Firm Investments Business R&D Expenditure IT Expenditure Non-R&D Innovation Expenditure

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European Innovation Scoreboard - Outputs

Innovators SME Product / Process Innovation SME Marketing / Organ. Innovation Resource Efficiency Innovators

Economic Effects High-tech Manuf. Employment Knowledge-Intensive Serv. Employment High-tech Manuf. Exports Knowledge-Intensive Serv. Exports New-to-market Sales New-to-firm Sales

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Summary Innovation Index 2008(29 Indicators)

Source: European Innovation Scoreboard 2008, UNU-MERIT, Maastricht , Jan 2009

Followers Leaders

EU-15

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0.4

0.45

0.5

0.55

0.6

0.65

0.7

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

0.4

0.45

0.5

0.55

0.6

0.65

0.7

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008

EIS (“2008 methodology”) Time Series

EU-27

Ireland

Denmark

Finland

Switzerland

Sweden

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Source: European Innovation Scoreboard 2008, UNU-MERIT, Maastricht , Jan 2009

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Summary

Metrics now show Ireland close to EU-15 average

i.e. among the “followers”.

Target peer group includes FI, SE, DK, CH & AT.

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Challenges

Monitoring Delivery against Correct Indicators Effective Linkages to Dual Business Sectors

Close attention to needs of foreign-owned firms Special efforts to lift indigenous firms

Keeping on Track to Target To match leading countries Achievable in ~10 years

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Dublin: European City of Science 2012