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Internationalisation of Finnish Public Research Organisations. Dr. Antti Pelkonen Senior Scientist , VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland antti.pelkonen@vtt.fi China-OECD Roundtable on Innovation Policies Beijing, 18 October 2011
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Internationalisation of Finnish Public Research Organisations Dr. Antti Pelkonen Senior Scientist , VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland antti.pelkonen@vtt.fi China-OECD Roundtable on Innovation Policies Beijing, 18 October 2011 Based on Loikkanen, T., Hyytinen, K., Konttinen, J. & Pelkonen, A.: Internationalisation of Finnish Public Research Organisations – Current State and Future Perspectives. Advisory Board for Sectoral Research 3/2010. http://www.minedu.fi/OPM/Tiede/setu/liitteet/SETU_3-2010.pdf
Content • Finnish economy and innovation system in a nutshell • Public research organisations (PROs) in Finland • Internationalisation of Finnish PROs • Conclusions
The Finnish economy and innovation system in a nutshell • Finland is a small, export-driven open economy in the Northern Europe • Forest and metal industries the traditional key economic sectors • Strong rise of the ICT sector driven by Nokia in the 1990s • In the 2000s all key economic sectors facing important challenges: growing need for systemic changes in the economy • Finnish national innovation system • 4.0 % of GDP used in R&D, second highest in the OECD countries after Sweden (in 2009) • Internationalisation is an important challenge for the whole innovation system
Public research organisations in Finland – Missions and tasks • 19 PROs operating in 8 administrative sectors • PROs are very diverse in their size, focus, and activities • Core missions • To produce and transfer knowledge to support decision-making • To carry out strategic research to sustain the high quality of their applied research services • Sector and organisation specific functions defined in acts of PROs
Finnish PROs – Funding and organisation • Funding from several sources: directly from budget, income from services, competition-based research funding • Share of direct budget funding decreased • PROs acquire increasingly competition-based research funding (45 % of all R&D funding in PROs; nearly 70 % in the most market-oriented PROs) • This has challenged them to develop service culture and customer driven activities • PROs organised according to sectoral and administrative structures but research needs are increasingly horizontal, crossing sectoral borders
Internationalisation of PROs – Driving forces and rationales • Important socio-economic challenges (climate change, necessity of ne.w energy sources etc.) are considered as the most important driver • Internationalisation of research and innovation itself: open innovation, global networks and acquisition of R&D services from global markets • Public funding to PROs is expected to decrease • Scientific rationale of internationalisation: advance of science is based on international collaboration. • Carrying out the official tasks of PROs also requires growing international collaboration.
Current state of internationalisation in Finnish PROs • Internationalisation considered as an important strategic aspect in most PROs, yet the importance varies across PROs. Internationalisation is less relevant for those whose activity area is very domestic. • Overall level of internationalisation still relatively modest, e.g.: • The volume of international funding is still rather low, on average around 7 per cent (15 % at highest). In the 2000s the volume has increased in most PROs, mainly from EU-sources (EU FPs). • Expert mobility: in most Finnish PROs the proportion of foreign staff is between 1 and 4 per cent of the whole staff (in some over 20 %). • In many PROs the challenge now is to mainstream internationalisation; thus far it has been limited to small part of the institutions and their staff.
International research collaboration of Finnish PROs • Finnish PROs have close links to global scientific and expert communities • Extensive collaboration in scientific publishing, in particular with US, Sweden, UK and Germany • Almost all PROs have long-term research cooperation with the Nordic countries and Russia, and with countries with large research systems (e.g. Germany, France, UK) • Half of them have established collaboration in the USA • Countries with the biggest potential for growing future collaborationare India, Japan, China,Australia andsome European countries(e.g. Portugal)
Geographical orientation of Finnish PROs´ in scientific publishing
How to promote internationalisation? Promoting outward mobility of own staff is considered as the most important method to support internationalisation: financial support, language and culture training, incentives in terms of employment, communication. Framework contracts with foreign institutes also important. Recruiting international top-level professionals: challenging but may be very influential. However, requires an attractive and high-quality research community, good physical environment (laboratory), well-know international reputation of the PRO, flexibility in terms of practical working conditions and good personal connections and networks. The most effective method for promoting internationalisation is to maintain a high-quality research environment
Conclusions • PROs are primarily national actors, but operating increasingly internationally. Internationalisation challenges the legitimacy of national funding and policy. • Need for evidence of national benefits of PROs’ international activities • Information about internationalisation should be gathered and disseminated more systematically and extensively to support monitoring, target setting and policy-making. • In the context of increasinginternationalisation, the (Finnish) PROsneed... • ...a common proactive strategy which allows them … • ...to form strong, multidisciplinary critical massesin order to be... • ... competitivein the `internal´ European applied research markets and … • ... capable to search for science-based solutions to grand socio-economic challenges in global markets of applied research.