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What is the new econ omy in Oxfordshire?. Helen Lawton Smith Department of Management Birkbeck, University of London & Oxfordshire Economic Observatory, Oxford University Presentation at Department of Planning Seminar Series, Oxford Brookes University, March 6 2014. Overview.
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What is the new economy in Oxfordshire? Helen Lawton Smith Department of Management Birkbeck, University of London & Oxfordshire Economic Observatory, Oxford University Presentation at Department of Planning Seminar Series, Oxford Brookes University, March 6 2014
Overview • What are the features of Oxfordshire’s ‘new economy’? • How is it similar and different to the ‘old economy’? • What are its exceptional features? • How is it changing? • As an entrepreneurial region, how is it being sustained?
Main sources of evidence used today • DPhil thesis School of Geography Oxford University 1990 • – The Location and development of advanced technology industry in Oxfordshire in the context of the research environment • Current study- where are they now? • OEO reports since 2001 – oeo.geog.ox.ac.uk including Enterprising Oxford (2003, 2007) • OEO team: Lawton Smith, Glasson, Chadwick, Romeo, Waters • OEO contribution to SQW Oxford Innovation Engine Report (2013) • Lawton Smith, Glasson et al (2013) ‘Enterprising Regions:evidence from Oxfordshire and Cambridgeshire’
Assessing the innovativeness of a region • what is specifically regional in the innovative process in the region under consideration? • Direct and indirect evidence • what are the alternative possible explanations for regional economic performance in the regions under consideration? • what is the conceptual model of this relationship? (Storper 2000)
Storper and an evolutionary economic geography approach • ‘it is not enough to simply summarize the evidence on regional high-technology growth in the 1990s, with standard indicators such as number and size of firms, employment, some remarks on products, etc. But that is not generally what is meant in the literature by evolutionary. This term comes specifically from evolutionary economics, and is inherently tied up with notions such as interdependence among actors, the way that such interdependencies and spillover effects create histories and render certain kinds of developments possible and impossible, and so on, all of which are generally summarized in the notion of path dependencies. To analyze such path dependencies (or evolutionary trajectories), then, there has to be careful attention to the factors that bind actions together and generate specific pathways in time and space. Its much more than just describing, however competently, the fact of how a given regional high tech economy grew in the 1990s.’ (Storper 2000)
Examples of other conceptual models relating to innovative entrepreneurship and regional growth • Innovative milieux (Camagni 1991) • Regional innovation systems (Cooke 1992) • Clusters (e.g. Porter 1995) • Knowledge spillover theory of entrepreneurship (Audretsch and Keilback 1995) • Feldman and Francis (2006) three stage growth model • Regional triple helix spaces (Etzkowitz 2008) • Fritsch and Schindele 2011 – labour markets and entrepreneurial activity
Governance: entrepreneurial regions • ‘entrepreneurial regions are defined by growing high levels of entrepreneurship and innovation, and as regions with outstanding entrepreneurial visions’ (EU, 2013). • must also be places where there is co-ordinated entrepreneurial activity to put those visions into practice so that ecosystems function effectively. • agency of research institutions, local government, skills agencies and so on working together.
An economic transformation: from a rural town with a famous university, a car industry to a high tech economy • Oxfordshire was in the top 19 counties of high technology industry in 1981 (Hall 1985) and R&D did not feature in the list of key sectors in the City of Oxford in that year. • Highest employment categories in Oxford City motor vehicle manufacture and education – both 16% (8.5% and 12.3% respectively in the county) • Mid-1980s, 182 R&D-intensive advanced technology firms employing 10,659 people • 35 university spin-offs • late 1990s - developing as a national and internationally important high-tech economy based in the South East of England, part of the Thames Valley, itself the richest and most dynamic economy in the UK outside London (Economic Development Strategy for Oxfordshire 1998/9, 4). • 2014 growing high-tech economy but on some indicators is underperforming comparator regions – Cambridgeshire and Thames Valley
Oxfordshire’s new economy: exceptional features • Rapidly growing number of high-tech firms, clustered in a few sectors (manufacturing and service) • strong science base • highly skilled labour market • anchor high-tech firms • business survival rates better than England levels and any other county council area. • Networks e.g. Oxford Trust (Science Oxford), OBN, Venturefest
Oxfordshire’s largest high tech sectors (wider definition) by employment 2013 • computer, electronic and optical products (3,500 employees), • motor vehicle manufacture (3,500), • publishing activities (5,500), • computer related activities (8,200), engineering & technical consultancy (7,100) scientific research and development (5,700). • Biomedical sector??
Anchor high-tech firms • Some earliest firms and largest firms originated in Oxford University or had a university connection • Penlon 1943 • Littlemore Scientific Engineering Ltd 1953 • Oxford Instruments 1959 • Research Machines (RM), 1973 • Sophos 1981
Oxfordshire labour market • One of most highly qualified labour markets in the county • Three-fifths of Oxford residents in employment are in managerial or professional occupations, compared to around two-fifths in Great Britain • 2011, 21,000 students at Oxford University, 11,752 UGs and 9, 621 PGs • Rising student numbers e.g. Oxford University had only 5,312 PG students in 2000/1 hence a rise of over 5000 in 10 years • About a third Oxford University (32.62%) and Oxford Brookes University (34.6%) students stay in the county after their first degree.
GVA per hour in Oxfordshire, Source ONS, 2013
Skills enhancement and development in sustaining growth Education • Oxford University Said Business School & Dept of Cont. Ed Oxford University entrepreneurship education. • Oxford Brookes Apprenticeships • Training provided by government labs and Oxford University • Specialist motorsport training • New university technical college in Didcot – vocational education focusing on science and engineering
Science and technology-based assets • Global brand, conveying an image of academic excellence • Oxford University, with outstanding research and teaching, and Oxford Brookes, one of the best performing new UK universities • Unique grouping of ‘big science’ and other research facilities, including the UK Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) Centre for Fusion Research; the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) Rutherford Appleton Laboratory; Diamond Light Source, the UK’s synchrotron facility; the Medical Research Council’s facilities at Harwell, and the Satellite Applications Catapult Centre • High level military education at Shrivenham (Cranfield U).
Isis Innovation, Oxford University technology transfer company (1988, 1997) • Isis Angels Network 1988 • Oxford Innovation Society 1990 • Review of Technology Transfer Arrangements 1994 • New CEO of Isis Innovation 1997 • Oxford University Consulting 2001 • Oxford Spin-out Equity Management 2008 • Oxford Invention Fund 2011
Locational factors mid-1980s • Proximity to the founder’s home was the critical factor; • 87 establishments (53%) gave this as a reason. • 17% spin-offs by existing companies (17) • Access to labour was mentioned by only 20 establishments • of much more significance for manufacturing than for R & D establishments and not at all for software houses. • 8 manufacturing firms, 2 R & D and 2 s/w gave access to technical information was the most important reason (7.3%). • Very few were likely to move out of the county • 20 establishments moved into Oxfordshire. • Overseas rather than local markets important • High levels of local subcontracting
2011 QuestionnaireObjective: what was locally important more or less than in previous decades? • Company’s sector focus and product portfolio • Company’s human resources • The Oxfordshire location • Company’s engagements with academia, research laboratories, local companies and public authorities • Company’s financial and innovation performance • Company’s internationalization • Other insights into the relevance of the Oxfordshire location to the firm and its growth.
Reasons for being in Oxfordshire Source: Survey 2010--2011, Survey 1996-1997, Survey 1986-1987: 7 companies
SOPHOS Source: Survey 1986-1987, Survey 1996-1997, Survey 2011-2012
Number of Sophos’ R&D Centres Source: Survey 1986-1987, Survey 1996-1997, Survey 2011-2012 I
Relevance of regions for Sophos’ Recruitment Source: Survey 1986-1987, Survey 1996-1997, Survey 2011-2012
The Three Most Important Reasons for SOPHOS to Stay in Oxfordshire Source: Survey 1986-1987, Survey 1996-1997, Survey 2011-2012
MR Magnets: three most important reasons for remaining in Oxfordshire
Local governance City Deals (2012) (National Funding) • intended to give participating areas ability to use funds better for local needs such as training and skills, roads etc. Oxford and Oxfordshire City Deal vision ‘to accelerate the growth of the city region’s knowledge-based economy’ Regional Growth Fund (National Funding) • 2.6 billion fund across England 2011 - 2016, which supports projects and programmes that are using private-sector investment to create economic growth and sustainable employment Oxford and Oxfordshire Local Economic Partnership (LEP) • Both universities represented at the Pro-Vice Chancellor level • http://www.oxfordshirelep.org.uk/cms/
Sustaining growth: the research base and local growth strategies • Science Vale UK • Harwell, Milton Park, two local district councils (Vale of White Horse and South Oxfordshire), the Oxfordshire Local Economic Partnership, Oxfordshire County Council and the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) http://www.sciencevale.com/ • University science parks, proposed bioescalator and University of Oxford’s plans for growth
Conclusions: sustaining growth - what needs to be overcome? • Numerous interconnected factors responsible for high tech economy growth relating to its exceptional features • But 2013 SQW report highlighted • Chronic shortage of early stage investment capital + intransigent banks • Extensive national visa requirements for highly-skilled foreign workers. • Lack of leadership from within Oxford University in local systems of governance + lack of leadership per se? • Lack of linkages between University of Oxford and high-tech firms. • National policy works on assumptions that more effect needs to be invested in local growth strategies focused on innovation – must therefore be things to fix!