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Demand for innovation. What policy can and cannot do for it. Jakob Edler, MIoIR. Seminar on The New Agenda of Innovation Studies: Policies Madrid, March 31 2014. Structure and Basic I dea. Policy trend Demand and Innovation Role of Policy Rationales “Instruments” Examples
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Demand for innovation.What policy can and cannot do for it.Jakob Edler, MIoIR Seminar on The New Agenda of Innovation Studies: Policies Madrid, March 31 2014 Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Structure and Basic Idea • Policy trend • Demand and Innovation • Role of Policy • Rationales • “Instruments” • Examples • Private Demand Instruments • Public Procurement as policy tool • Challenges • Conclusion Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Policy Trend (innovation policy!) • Demand measures for decades (e.g. market transformation…) • EU level driving: • Kok and Aho Reports • PCP (ICT area), LMI, Horizon 2020 (New regulation proposal) • Many countries: studies, intentions, new schemes (OECD 2011, Izsak/Edler 2011), small countries (Georghiou et al 2011) • Regions have started as well (Wintjes 2012) • Demand conditions recognised as important (UK 2009, 2010) • Demand based innovation policy: „ most important“ area to learn (Trendchart Users, July 2011) Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
The meaning of demand for innovation • Long standing theoretical debate (Marshall, Schmookler, Rosenberg, Metcalf…) • Successful innovations: most often reaction to perceived changes in demand rather than to technological advances • Innovation failures often due to a misperception of what the market is ready and willing to accept (Rothwell 2007) • Eco innovation: demand more important than public subsidies, growing demand is most importance incentive for innovation (Horbach et al 2012, Newell 2010) • Firm survey (Commission 2009) • Policies to improve demand for innovation highly relevant • Uncertain demand most important obstacle • Demand for demand policies.. Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Demand andinnovation (eco-innovation) Source: INNOBAROMETER, EUCom (Gallup) 2011
Demand and Innovation (eco-innovation): SPAIN: 80% saydemandisveryseriousorseriousobstacle Barriers to accelerated eco-innovation uptake and development for companiesUncertain demand from the market (Gallup 2011, p. 31) Source: INNOBAROMETER, EU Com (Gallup) 2011
Different ways in which demand influences innovation • Demand triggering innovation: asking for new products / services (new functions, more efficient…) • Demand being responsive to existing innovation: absorbing, adopting, using, accepting innovations • Innovation role of users • Co-production (co-adaptation): user – producer • User produced innovation Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Demand based Innovation PolicyDefintion • all public action to induce innovation and/or speed up the diffusion of innovation through • increasing the demand for innovation • i.e. influencing the willingness and ability to buy and use an innovation) and/or • defining new functional requirements for products and services and/or • improving user involvement in innovation production (user-driven) • Innovation defined form demand perspective (including “diffusion”) Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Rationale - Three sets of justifications • Information asymmetries (producers do not know preferences, users do not know innovations) • Poor articulation by consumers/policy • Adoption externalities • Lack of interaction between users and producers • High switching and entry costs: lack of capabilities and willingness to use new technologies • Technological path dependencies system weaknesses* hamper market entry and diffusion • Logic: Intelligent public action to overcome various kinds of “weaknesses” and link to societal needs, efficiency gains and economic development Societal goals, Public sector needs • Contributing to sectoral / societal policy needs and goals (e.g. the eco-agenda) • Making public service more effective and efficient (value for money, long term) • Support (local) producers, service providers • Indirect: Triggering something bigger, market creation • Dominant designs, Demonstration effects • Scale/scope advantages • Learning / upgrading for buyer and provider • Keep up innovation pressure in system • Attractive investment location (demand conditions) Support industry, growth and location Manchester Institute of Innovation Research * term borrowed from Bergek
Instruments - Typology • Public Procurement (policies): direct/catalytical; strategic/general • Private Demand: • Demand Subsidies, Demand tax incentives • Awareness measures, labels.. • Training • Demonstration projects • Articulation of needs, joint need definition (e.g. foresight) • Support user – producer interaction • Support user driven innovation • Regulation / Standardisation (creating markets, security, health etc.) • Mix of Measures • Various demand measures • Demand and supply link • Pre-commercial procurement (direct support to supply, but based on need, potential purchase afterwards) Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Examples Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Demand Subsidies – Tax Incentives • Applied and analysed mainly in energy • Very mixed messages – no clear „best“ approach • Example: Subsidies for eco-innovation purchase • Diffusion and size of markets push innovation • Positive impact of subsidies on uptake, but often not „significant“ • E.g. 15% price reduction (insulation): „limited“ effect (8% to 11% of respondents) • Other factors often more important (cost savings over time, other input factors) • Considerable windfall • Cross country differences in context and design Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Demand Subsidies – Tax Incentives • Comparison supply vs. demand instruments: • Limited evidence, often wrong indicator (patents only) • R&D subsidies more important for R&D leading to patents; product innovation, • Demand subsidies: process innovation (diffusion effect) • Older studies: (public) demand more important than R&D subsidies • Demand measures also have innovations effects abroad • Dependent on need for user – producer proximity • Command & control: radical innovation • Price based: incremental Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Demand Subsidies – Tax Incentives • Subsidy effect: Immediate monetary effect more important than savings over time • Right level of incentive: • too high: inefficient, too low: no sustained diffusion • Timing • Leverage effect on diffusion higher in early phase (but risk: too early) • Reduction over time reasonable • Demand measures risk of creating lock in (developing niche, but no incentive for next generation) Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Policy measures to support public procurement • Note: public procurement NOT an instrument for innovation per se • Policies to support PPI tackle a set of well-known weaknesses • adverse incentive structures (leading to risk aversion and lack of innovation orientation), • dysfunctional internal division of responsibilities (disconnecting users, budget holders and procurers), • lack of internal capabilities and skills (market knowledge, need definition, business case, using wrong procedures), • lack of interaction between public bodies and, • lack of political commitment and organisational leadership. • Poor roll out of those policies, multiple challenges Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
I N N O V A T I O N P R A C T I S E A. Conceptual: Policy and innovation system, Rationale, Appropriateness B. Discursive: CTA, supplier-user discourse C. Operational: Market&Technology Intelligence D. Evaluative: ex ante / ex post – impact STRATEGIC INTELLIGENCE P O L I C Y DEMAND: Innovation Users or co-preoducers private Public (users, procurers, policy makers) consumers firms Framework Domain policy (social need) Innovation/economic General procurement Challenges for Policy Design and Implementation SUPPLY:Innovation Producers Sate of the art Business infrastructure Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Conclusion • What policy can do • Using demand to pull innovation in specific directions (societal benefit) • Improving how markets work: Reducing market uncertainty and tackling system weaknesses, awareness, skills • What policy cannot (should not) do • Prepare long term supply-demand roadmaps • See demand based innovation policy as economic policy only (tension societal welfare and economic benefit) • Limiting variety and failure Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
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The meaning of demand for innovation • Theory • Demand for innovation: signal to market to acquire new product / service on the basis of a need for a certain price • Demand crucial for innovation (back Alfred Marshall) • Strong theoretical demand debate in 1960s and 1980s • Importance of the market pulling (incremental) innovations from suppliers (Schmookler 1966) and “steering” firms to work on certain problems (Rosenberg 1969) • Interplay of demand and supply (Metcalf 1995) • Users assourcesforinnovation (co-production, inputs, von Hippel 1986…) Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Price based instruments Manchester Institute of Innovation Research