Posted: January 23, 2008

Innovation strategies leaving developing world behind in race for prosperity

(Nanowerk News) New research released this month from the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) finds that innovation is the single most important element in the emerging global economic contest.
CIGI's newest Working Paper, Science and Technology Policies, National Competitiveness, and the Innovation Divide, authored by Senior Fellow Carin Holroyd, analyzes innovation strategies adopted by three very different countries - Japan, Canada and Nigeria - and how these nations are trying to mobilize human and financial resources to achieve economic success.
Driven by the rapid and unprecedented changes in the global economy, developed countries are shifting political support from heavy industry to nanotechnology, biotechnology, digital enterprises and alternative energy solutions. Analyzing this trend, Holroyd concludes that there is a growing "nano-divide" and "bio-tech gap" that will far exceed the much publicized digital divide.
Leading industrialized countries invest between one and three per cent of their GDP in science and technology research. Despite promising developments such as plans for a series of African Institutes of Science and Technology, also known as Nelson Mandela Institutes, most developing countries, such as Nigeria, devote only 0.1 per cent or less of their GDP and lack the financial resources and scientific and technological heritage to compete with wealthier nations.
Additionally, the industrialized world is drawing tens of thousands of scientists and technologists out of the developing world each year, broadening the innovation divide and lessening the chance that these countries will be able to compete in the years to come. The innovation gaps, the author writes, are significant and serious. "The concerns raised by the earlier debate over the digital divide could pale in comparison to those generated by the innovation revolution."
Since economic prosperity in the coming decades will rely heavily on the ability of national economies to replace labour-intensive manufacturing with high-technology- based investments, Holroyd concludes that the widening innovation divide requires a significant response from governments and international institutions in order to create greater and more equitable global prosperity. She suggests that significant collaborative steps are needed to reduce the divide, and that "perhaps there is a role for an international scientific governance institution that can help ensure access to basic scientific infrastructure and recent discoveries for all countries."
The research also finds that Canada is on the right path but remains heavily dependent on the substantial commitment of government funds for scientific and technological research, with a less than impressive track record on the corporate side.
For more information and to download this and other CIGI Working Papers, please visit: http://www.cigionline.org/publications.
The Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) is a think tank that addresses international governance challenges and provides informed advice to decision-makers on multilateral governance issues. CIGI supports research initiatives by recognized experts and promising academics; forms networks that link world-class minds across disciplines; informs and shapes dialogue among scholars, opinion leaders, key policy-makers and the concerned public; and builds capacity by supporting excellence in policy-related scholarship. CIGI was founded in 2002 by Jim Balsillie, co-CEO of RIM (Research In Motion), and collaborates with and gratefully acknowledges support from a number of strategic partners, in particular the Government of Canada and the Government of Ontario. For more information, please visit www.cigionline.org.
Source: CIGI