The World’s Most Innovative Countries, 2016
Innovation is essential
for sustainable growth. Countries should maintain their R&D investments and
cooperate internationally to protect their innovation momentum in the face of
low-growth scenarios.
The Human Brain
Project (HBP), a global, 10-year scientific research project aimed at advancing
the understanding of neuroscience, brain-inspired computing and brain-related
medicine, got under way in 2013. This European Commission initiative, born from
the seminal work of Professor Henry Markram, from École Polytechnique Fédérale de
Lausanne (EPFL) in Switzerland, provides the scientific
community with the infrastructure to collaborate and make new inroads into the
study of neuroscience, and a total funding of 1 billion Euros.
Such cooperation
isn’t unusual in Europe. The EUREKA programme, a publicly-funded,
intergovernmental network involving over 40 countries was created in 1985 to
enhance European competitiveness by ‘promoting innovation across borders’..
Government policy, strong R&D
spending and coordination characterise groupings such as HBP and EUREKA. These
factors also make countries more innovative. Switzerland yet again tops
this year’s Global Innovation Index (GII), ahead of seven
other European countries in the top 10, Singapore (ranked 6th) and
the U.S. (4th). Switzerland and its peers got top marks across
major pillars of our index, such as the strength of institutions,
infrastructure, human capital and research and market sophistication.
2016 TOP 10
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|
1.
Switzerland
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Switzerland
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2.
Sweden
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Sweden
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3.
U.K
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United Kingdom
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4.
U.S.A.
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United States
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5.
Finland
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Finland
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6.
Singapore
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Singapore
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7.
Ireland
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Ireland
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8.
Denmark
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Denmark
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9.
Netherlands
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Netherlands
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10. Germany
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Germany
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Leveraging global
innovation
The index, a
collaboration in itself between INSEAD, Cornell University and the World
Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO), finds that investments in R&D
and innovation are central to economic growth; helping developed countries
reinvent themselves in times of economic decline and emerging countries answer
their societies’ growing needs.
While science and
innovation are more internationalised and collaborative than ever before,
countries sometimes tend to perceive each other as contenders rather than
collaborators. Countries can overcome this by approaching innovation as a
global positive effort instead of a zero-sum game.
We also find that
sustained investment is critical. It may be tempting to scale back investment
during times of low-growth or economic uncertainty, but it pays to keep it up
as “stop-and-go” approaches quickly erase progress made in previous years.
Big achievers
China still only
spends a small share of its research budget on basic R&D in comparison to
the leaders, but its expenditures are getting closer to those of rich
countries. It makes a symbolic entry into the GII top 25 this year, the first
middle income country to do so. The top 25 is typically comprised of high
income countries. China’s progress has been remarkable in innovation quality,
output and efficiency. Similar improvements have also helped other
middle-income countries such as Bulgaria (38), Costa Rica (45) and Romania
(48). Among the lower income countries, Moldova (46), Ukraine (56) and
Vietnam (59) all outperform their peers in the same income group by at least 10
percent. Thus, China’s progress can be seen as a harbinger for future
advancements, bridging the divide between rich and poor countries, an ongoing
and defining feature of the GII.
Go, go, governments
and governance
Governments will be
crucial in this endeavour, not just in facilitating an environment conducive to
research and development of innovations, but in facilitating international
collaboration, and actively supporting a global innovation governance
framework. Such a framework would have to be flexible enough to accommodate the
dynamic nature of innovation and facilitate the mobility of scientists, funding
and co-financing schemes.
Britain’s recent
decision to leave the European Union (EU) is a case in point. Some “Brexiteers”
and other anti-EU activists have claimed that small, nimble economies are more
open and better able to weather crises and therefore require less international
collaboration. Indeed, the GII’s research does show that small, open trading
nations like Switzerland and Singapore are world leaders in innovation. But the
notion that they do it while not part of a major grouping such as the EU is to
miss the bigger picture. Both are truly integrated, global markets that
collaborate heavily with bigger neighbouring economies and indeed global ones.
Switzerland may not be part of the EU, but it is playing a central role in
projects such as the Human Brain Project with its European partners, and builds
pan-European infrastructure such as the new Gothard tunnel.
Quality matters
Quality is just as
important as quantity of innovation. Since 2013, GII has been tracking
innovation quality by looking at the level of local universities,
internationalisation of local inventions and citations of research. In this
regard, not only is China is at the top of the middle income group, it
outscores some high income countries in the quality of universities and
research citations. A number of other top-scoring middle income countries
helping to close the gap between rich and poor countries, including South
Africa (54), India (66) and Brazil (69), all have scores to rival China’s in
terms of universities and citations.
Policy-makers should
bear in mind that policies matter, and have a key role to play in developing an
innovation mindset while reducing sentiments of nationalism and fragmentation.
This starts with education, where creating excitement about science and
encouraging risk-taking will spark a curiosity students will carry into their
working lives. This is especially crucial as innovation increasingly takes the
form of management practices and business or organisational models, beyond
technical creation. Global innovation is crucial for countries to avoid low
growth or mitigation scenarios but it won’t come about without coordination and
good policy.
-
Bruno Lanvin, Executive Director
for Global Indices at INSEAD.
Read more at http://knowledge.insead.edu/entrepreneurship/the-worlds-most-innovative-countries-2016-4864?utm_source=INSEAD+Knowledge&utm_campaign=49de05ea47-15_August_mailer8_15_2016&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_e079141ebb-49de05ea47-249840429#zHu7QchRLCeBzrek.99
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