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From the Economics of Knowledge to the Learning Economy. Globelics Academy May 2, 2007 Bengt-Åke Lundvall. Why focus on economics of knowledge?.
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From the Economics of Knowledge to the Learning Economy Globelics Academy May 2,2007 Bengt-Åke Lundvall
Why focus on economics of knowledge? • In international organisations – OECD, UN, World Bank, European Commission - it is now recognised that competitiveness and economic progress is based upon knowledge. • In the management literature it is increasingly recognised that knowledge is the strategic ressource – knowledge needs to be managed! • But how to understand Knowledge and Learning in this context? What are the implications for economic theory, innovation policy and knowledge management?
Understanding knowledge is a key to intelligent management and policy!!! • Uneven development and inequality as reflecting the uneven distribution of knowledge. • What kind of knowledge matters for economic performance? • How easy/difficult is it to ’transfer’ or ’learn’ different kinds of knowledge. • To understand and master the process of knowledge creation and learning is a key to intelligent management and to intelligent economic development strategies!!
The complex task of knowledge policy Knowledge policy and institutions have to do two opposite things at the same time: • 1. Protect intellectual property – refers to knowledge as a public good – information is easy to transfer (Arrow 1959 and Nelson 1959) • 2. Promote knowledge diffusion and sharing – refers to knowledge as tacit and local – know how-knowledge is difficult to transfer (Marshall 1923). Today the balance has gone too far toward protection!! Protecting those who have knowledge already.
The complex task of knowledge management – two trade-offs • Externally: Protecting core competences while sharing knowledge in networks and technological alliances: Knowledge as an ’exchange marker’. • Internally: Formalising employee knowledge for sharing through ICT – while exploiting informal knowledge embodied in employees.
Is knowledge a public good? Public good is characterised by being Non-rival and Non-excludable. • Arrow and Nelson from around 1960 knowledge as public good calls for government intervention. IPR for specific knowledge. Government subsidy or production for generic knowledge. • Marshall (around 1920) on industrial district – cf Silicon Valley. Knowledge is local and not easy to move from one place to another. • To solve this contradiction we need to make distinction between different kinds of knowledge.
Economics: Information as commodity – the insights of Kenneth Arrow • Market failure • Buyer uncertainty about the value of information • Seller keeps it when selling it • Buyer can sell it to others after he has bought it • Easy to reproduce once it has been produced • Policy issues • Intellectual property rights to give incentives to knowledge producers • Public production or subsidies to knowledge producers
What matters for economic performance is competence rather than information! • OECD has shown that in most countries a major part of aggregate economic growth can be explained by changes inside firms in terms of innovation and growth. • The diffusion of new technology and especially of new organisational characteristics is very uneven among firms in the same sector and across sectors. • To enhance the competence and ’the absorptive capacity’ of firms is a major challenge not addressed by standard economics.
Economics: Skills and competence as commodity • Skills are partially tacit and embodied in people and organisations - cannot be sold or bought separately. • Access to skills through hiring, through mergers and take-overs and through networking. • Labour market dynamics affect skill formation. • Knowledge management and the codification issue • Underinvestment in skill formation within firms - people move on from one firm to the next. • Policy issue: Competition clause, employee share holding (c.f. IPRs) may slow down learning at the level of society.
Taxonomy for knowledge (Lundvall and Johnson 1994) • Individual competence • Know what – facts about the world • Know why – scientific laws in relation to nature and society • Know how – how to use tools and concepts • Know who – know who knows what and what to do
Organisational competence • Know What=Shared information - data bases • Know Why=Shared models of interpretation (including company stories) • Know How=Shared routines • Know Who=Shared networks
Information technology and its impact on the different kinds of knowledge • Know-what in data bases - limits of search machines • Know-why in global science networks - on the need to have absorptive capacity • Know-how in expert systems - on the limits of skill codification • Know-who in registers of firms - on the importance of trust and the social dimension.
Codification of Tacit Knowledge • A transformation of tacit knowledge that makes it explicit. Sometimes difficult: • Write down how you solve a mathematical problem • Write down how you prepare the food. • Write down how you swim • Write down how you make diagnosis of a patient – Exp. Syst. • Write down how you manage the firm - MIS
Tacit versus codified knowledge • Tacit knowledge • Tacit by nature • Tacit for economic reasons - too costly to codify • Explicit and codified knowledge • How much of the knowledge package can be codified? • How wide is the access to the codified knowledge (specialised codes, communities of practise, epistemological communities).
Tacit versus codified knowledge • Know how (biking, swimming but also management and research) has always elements of tacit knowledge • Codification of know-how is always incomplete - lack of distinction between more or less complete codification. • Codification as an economically determined activity - a crucial element of knowledge management
The learning economy concept • First introduced in Lundvall nsi-book 1992 • Developed into hypothesis about speed-up in Lundvall Johnson 1994 • Inspired and supported by labour market analysis at OECD 1992-95. • The social dimension made explicit 1995 • Systematic research on learning economy - Testing the hypotheses - 1996- • Relevance for China and other emerging economies 2005-
The learning economy – as analytical and historical perspective • We can work from the hypothesis that learning has become dominant feature • Learning economy as alternative to information economy or knowledge-based economy. • We can use the learning economy as analytical perspective • We study how the institutional set up of the economy/the firm affects learning and how learning affects economic performance
The mechanism: Selection, transformation and speed-up of change and learning • Globalisation and new technology and deregulation of markets together speed up the rate of change in many sectors. • In the learning economy a lot of new knowledge is created but a lot is also destroyed - creative destruction • Intensified competition selects firms that are rapid learners and firms select rapid learners as employees. • Rapid learners innovate and impose change on the rest of the economy. • As a result there is a speed-up of change with positive impact on competitiveness but with negative impact on social cohesion.
The social dimension of the learning economy – the model • Social cohesion promotes learning but learning based growth undermines social cohesion. Calls for public policy to redistribute learning opportunities and learning capabilities = New New Deal (cf Roosevelt in US 1930s) Growth Social cohesion is especially important for DUI-mode of learning. Less important for STI-mode. Learning Social cohesion
The Learning Economy compared to other concepts! • Service economy • Information society • Intangible economy • Knowledge based economy The learning economy challenges these concepts: 1. Focus on dynamics rather than on the state of the system. 2. Bringing in explicitly the social dimension (learning as a social and interactive process).
Learning economy in historical perspective – testing hypotheses • ’The learning economy’ reflects an acceleration of change • Shorter product life cycles and shorter life time for competences (halving time = 1 year for computer engineers) • Speed-up of learning confirmed by labour market surveys in the UK (Tomlinson 2005). • Polarisation in the labour market • Unskilled workers and regions with weak learning capacity becomes worse off. • Polarisation confirmed: Management and engineers learn the most – female unskilled workers the least – UK. • Income distribution between and within regions and countries becomes more skew – when there is no government intervention!
Policy implications of the learning economy-perspective • Education: Educate in order to establish learning capability. Give access to life long learning. • Labour markets: Need for labour market institutions and trade unions that support competence building(new workers’ contracts emphasising competence building). • Firms: Promote the diffusion of learning organisations. • Income distribution: Need for new new deal with focus on redistribution of learning capability. • Innovation policy: Promoting DUI and STI-modes • Responsibility of last resort for the public sector – otherwise only the already skilled get more training.
Learning organisations • Learning organisations: • Are more flat and allow horizontal communication inside and outside the organisational borders • Establish cross-departmental and cross-functional teams and promote job-circulation between functions. • Delegate responsibility to workers and invest in their skills • Establish closer co-operation with suppliers, customers and knowledge institutions.
An important source of competence building is the learning organisation • Learning organisations and networking organisations (in Denmark) • Create more and more stable jobs • Are more productive • Are more active in terms of product innovation Why are learning organisations more successful in the learning economy?
Learning economy as analytical perspective • Learning in formal education • Learning by searching – R&D – STI-learning • Learning in practise – DUI-learning • Learning to become a member of a community of practise or of an epistemological community. • Learning by doing, using and interacting • Learning as worker vs. Learning as consumer • Apprenticeship • Interactive learning
STI-mode and DUI-mode of learning • STI=Science-Technology-Innovation mode is characterised by science-approach – formalisation, explicitation and codification – knowledge policy as ´science policy’ – knowledge management as ICT-based knowledge-sharing. • DUI=Learning by Doing, Using and Interacting mode refers to experience-based, implicit, embedded and embodied knowledge.
DUI-learning mode - indicatorsIndicators: The organic and integrative organization • Interdisciplinary workgroups • Quality circles • Systems for collecting proposals • Autonomous groups • Integration of functions • Softened demarcations • Cooperation with customers
STI-mode of learning - indicators • Expenditures on R&D as share of total revenue • Cooperation with knowledge institutions • Indicator for workforce composition
Probability to introduce product innovation (corr. for sector, size and ownership)
Operational dimensions of the learning organization • Cross occupational working groups • Integration of functions • Softened demarcations • Delegation of responsibility • Self directed teams • Quality circles/groups • Systems for collection of employee proposals • Education activities tailored to the firm • Long term educational planning • Wages based on qualifications and functions • Wages based on results • Closer cooperation with customers • Closer cooperation with subcontractors • Closer cooperation with universities and technological institutes
A normal distribution of the 2000 firms over the scale from 0-14
Logistic regression – probability for prod. innov. compared to benchmark
Employment 1992-97 and product and innovations 1993-95 (index 1992=100)
The double change in context • ICT and access to elements from the science base becomes increasingly important for firms in all sectors – calls for a strengthening of STI-mode of learning • But these changes and globalisation contribute to speed up and to the formation of the learning economy – calls for a strengthening of DUI-mode of learning