logging in or signing up 01 Carl Dahlman WBI Aric85 Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 88 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: March 18, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript The Challenge of the Knowledge Economy for Countries of Eastern and Central Europe and the EC: The Challenge of the Knowledge Economy for Countries of Eastern and Central Europe and the EC ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Carl Dahlman World Bank Institute Knowledge Economy Forum III: Improving Competitiveness Through a Knowledge Based Economy Budapest, March 23, 2004 Structure of Presentation: Structure of Presentation The Knowledge Revolution Benchmarking Countries on the Knowledge Economy Challenges for Eastern and Central European Countries Moving Forward-The Bigger Picture ©Knowledge for Development, WBINew Growth Patterns: New Growth Patterns In last decade there has been renewed interest in growth because: Micro level evidence of increasing importance of new technologies ICT revolution Increased share of high tech products in exports Managerial and organizational changes Macro level evidence of changes of patterns and nature of growth among OECD countries Surprisingly strong growth of US economy 1995-2002 Reversal of trend towards convergence of per capita income among OECD countries. This has lead to focus on “new economy” to understand what is going on ©Knowledge for Development, WBIThe Knowledge Revolution: The Knowledge Revolution Ability to create, access and use knowledge is becoming fundamental determinant of global competitiveness Seven key elements of “Knowledge Revolution” Increased codification of knowledge and development of new technologies Closer links with science base/increased rate of innovation/shorter product life cycles Increased importance of education & up-skilling of labor force, and life-long learning Investment in Intangibles (R&D,education, software) greater than Investments in Fixed Capital in OECD ©Knowledge for Development, WBIThe Knowledge Revolution -2: The Knowledge Revolution -2 Greater value added now comes from investment in intangibles such as branding, marketing, distribution, information management Innovation and productivity increase more important in competitiveness & GDP growth Increased Globalization and Competition Trade/GDP from 38% in 1990 to 57% in 2001 Value added by TNCs 27% of global GDP Bottom Line: Constant Change and Competition Implies Need for Constant Restructuring and Upgrading ©Knowledge for Development, WBIImplications for Eastern & Central European Countries: Implications for Eastern & Central European Countries As Eastern and Central European countries increasingly integrate with Europe and rest of the world they will be under increased pressure to improve their: economic incentive and institutional regime, investment climate and ability to re-deploy resources to the most efficient uses. They risk falling behind because they also have to strengthen basic infrastructures in: education information and communications and innovation They need to develop strategies to use existing and new knowledge to: improve performance in traditional sectors exploit opportunities for leapfrogging develop competitive new sectors ©Knowledge for Development, WBIFramework for Using K4D:Four Key Functional Areas : Framework for Using K4D: Four Key Functional Areas Economic incentive and institutional regime that provides incentives for the efficient use of existing and new knowledge and the flourishing of entrepreneurship Educated, creative and skilled people Dynamic information infrastructure Effective national innovation system ©Knowledge for Development, WBIKAM Methodology: KAM Methodology KAM: 76 structural/qualitative variables to benchmark performance on 4 pillars Variables normalized from 0 (worst) to 10 (best) for 121 countries www.worldbank.org/kam Basic scorecard for 14 variables at two points in time, 1995 and 2002 Aggregate knowledge economy index (KEI) ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide9: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary, Czech Republic, Poland (most recent)Slide10: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Knowledge Economy IndexSlide11: Global Competitiveness Indicators ©Knowledge for Development, WBISituation of Transition Economies: Situation of Transition Economies In spite of significant progress, still need to improve economic and institutional regime to reach EC levels ICT infrastructure and applications still low relative to EC levels Educational attainment gap narrower in accession countries, but education and training still suffer from rigidity, too specialized and fragmented challenge of life-long learning, brain drain Innovation system is weakest in terms of R&D inputs and outputs, also in terms of drawing on global knowledge, and the interaction among key troika: R&D institutes Universities Productive enterprises ©Knowledge for Development, WBICompetitiveness Challenges: Competitiveness Challenges Low productivity and low investment rate Most of productive sector outmoded if not obsolete, except for pockets of modernity, based largely on recent FDI Competitiveness based primarily on low wages or natural resources Skills levels not always up to new needs Few links to global value chains except for autos and electronics Poor links between productive sector, domestic research institutes, and universities ©Knowledge for Development, WBIStrategies of Using Knowledge for Development: Strategies of Using Knowledge for Development Have to be tailored to specific realities of each country Involve different trade-offs Are not just about ICT or high technology,but about broader economic strategies Require coordination across functional areas (hence our 4 pillars of KE) and among government, business and civil society ©Knowledge for Development, WBIKey Elements of Economic Incentive & Institutional Regime : Key Elements of Economic Incentive & Institutional Regime Competitive environment as stimulus for improved performance Financial system that mobilizes and allocates capital to its most productive uses Flexible labor markets including support for up-skilling and re-skilling Appropriate legal, tax, regulatory system and strong rule of law that support entrepreneurship Effective safety nets to facilitate adjustment to constant restructuring Effective, transparent and accountable government ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide16: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Economic Incentive RegimeSlide17: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Economic Regime VariablesKey Elements in Information Infrastructure: Key Elements in Information Infrastructure Communications infrastructure (from radio to internet) Telecom issues (competition, pricing, regulation) Digital Divide (access, content, language) Use E-govt, E-business, E-education, E-health Legal and regulatory regime for E-economy Software Skills to use ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide19: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI ICTSlide20: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: ICT VariablesKey Elements in Human Resources: Key Elements in Human Resources Access to different levels of education Gender balance Quality of educational content (core technical & social skills, relevance, creativity) Balance among different levels of education Financing & public and private roles Life-long learning opportunities Role of the ministry of education and its relations with labor, market, and economy ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide22: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI EducationSlide23: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Education VariablesKey Elements in National Innovation System: Key Elements in National Innovation System Tapping into Global Knowledge Trade, foreign investment, tech transfer, Technical journals, travel, internet, conferences Creating and adapting knowledge Pubic vs private R&D; Basic vs applied R&D From specialized research institutions to production Disseminating Knowledge Growth of more efficient enterprises Suppliers of equipment, technical services and info Extension services: agricultural Using knowledge Depends on cost and benefits Depends on education, skills, complementary inputs Depends on economic and institutional regime ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide25: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI InnovationSlide26: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Innovation (absolute version)Slide27: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Innovation Systems VariablesSlide28: European Innovation Scoreboard 2002- Candidate Countries ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide29: R&D Expenditures as % of GDP ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide30: Scientists & Engineers in R&D ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide31: Scientific and Technical Journals ©Knowledge for Development, WBIConceptual Framework for Innovation in Developing Countries: Conceptual Framework for Innovation in Developing Countries Innovation in developing countries should be understood broadly as something new to the local environment Therefore distinguish two broad types of innovation Local improvements through adoption of existing foreign technology Development of technologies new to world ©Knowledge for Development, WBIInnovation in Developing Countries: Innovation in Developing Countries In developing countries the first type is the most relevant, the second is rarer, except for the more advanced developing countries Developing countries will get a bigger economic impact from raising average local practice to best world practice than from creation of their own new knowledge They will also get a bigger impact from raising average local practice to best local practice, therefore the critical importance of domestic diffusion ©Knowledge for Development, WBISources of Domestic Innovation: Sources of Domestic Innovation Imports of capital goods, components, products or services Products and services brought to and produced in country by foreign investors Copying or reverse engineering of foreign products and services Technological efforts of domestic or foreign firms, not all of which are based on formal R&D ©Knowledge for Development, WBIBias Towards Formal R&D Efforts: Bias Towards Formal R&D Efforts Policy makers in developing countries tend to focus on formal R&D and on publicly funded research efforts They tend to focus on glamorous high technology sectors They tend to focus on industry, to a lesser extent on agriculture, and very little on services They also tend to focus on R&D inputs and outputs, not so much on entrepreneurship and management, or links to broader economic and institutional regime ©Knowledge for Development, WBIChallenges: Challenges But, as noted earlier, focus of policymakers is not the most important elements of the innovation system in developing countries R&D not the main source of innovation High tech sectors are tiny part of developing economies Service sector is largest share of economic activity Successfully applying knowledge requires entrepreneurship, management, organizations,and also depends on economic and institutional regime Need a better conceptual framework and policy tool kit that Differentiates across countries Provides made to measure policy advice and specific project design ©Knowledge for Development, WBIDifferentiated Strategies: Differentiated Strategies ©Knowledge for Development, WBINational Innovation System: National Innovation System Needs to include not just R&D institutions and universities, but most critically firms and other knowledge institutions Technical information & extension services Metrology, standards, testing, quality control Technical and management consulting Specialized suppliers, networks, Clusters and inter-firm interactions Seed and venture capital Needs to include attention to the broader economic incentive and institutional regime, education and skills, and ICT-hence our K4D framework ©Knowledge for Development, WBIChallenges for Eastern and Central European Countries: Challenges for Eastern and Central European Countries Finding advantageous ways to plug into and compete successfully in the global system Tapping global knowledge Getting into global value chains Moving up these value chains Taking advantage of global knowledge to improve welfare Preventive health Agriculture Developing differentiated advantages Building on local resources Building on culture and other intangibles Strengthening non-traded services ©Knowledge for Development, WBIMoving Forward-The Bigger Picture: Moving Forward-The Bigger Picture Progress and Challenges to the EC Challenges to the Enlarged EC Challenges for Non-Candidate Countries ©Knowledge for Development, WBIProgress and Challenges to EC: Progress and Challenges to EC Progress Significant integration in product market Significant integration to single currency Increase in regional stability Challenges Low productivity growth, low economic growth and lack of convergence Challenges compounded by aging population/increasing dependency ratios Losing global market share ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide42: 15 Most Populous Economies: Population 2002 (billions) ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide43: 15 Largest Economies: GDP 2002 (Trillions of international $) United States $10.14t China $5.73t South Korea $0.78t India $2.69t Indonesia $0.66t Mexico $0.88t Brazil $1.31t Spain $0.85t United Kingdom $1.51t Italy $1.48t France $1.55t Germany $2.17t Canada $0.90t Japan 3.26 -3 -1 1 3 5 7 9 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 30,000 35,000 GDP per capita (international $) 2002 Ave RGDP per capita growth 1990-2002 (%) Russia $1.41t ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide44: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI GDP (US$ Current) 1990-2002Slide45: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Shares of Global GDP (US$ Current In/nal PPP)Prospects for Enlarged EC: Prospects for Enlarged EC Increased market integration and specialization, stability, and prosperity Strong restructuring pressure on accession countries, but also pressure on current 15 Need for still greater integration in services (network industries and financial), labor legislation and labor mobility, and tax regimes Challenge of coordination across enlarged set of national systems Need to increase productivity and growth.This will require Continue improvements in economic and institutional regime Strengthening education, research and innovation ©Knowledge for Development, WBIChallenges to Non-Candidate Countries: Challenges to Non-Candidate Countries European countries not part of EC 25 are going to face greater challenges as world moves toward three large economic blocks Do not benefit from as much pressure to reform economic incentive and institutional regime Do not receive structural funds or technical support Will have to undertake more of necessary reforms and restructuring on their own Will be more difficult, Greater risks of falling further behind Will have to be more proactive in seeking alliances with EC and other blocks ©Knowledge for Development, WBIChallenges Ahead: Challenges Ahead Very dynamic situation with moving goalposts & risk of increasing knowledge divide between advanced and developing countries and with-in countries Need to raise awareness among policy makers, private sector and civil society in developing countries Need to develop coherent strategies to take advantage of opportunities and reduce adverse impact ©Knowledge for Development, WBIThe Way Forward-Conclusion: The Way Forward-Conclusion Critical to go from analysis of problems to concrete initiatives to improve KE performance Successful further reform requires creating stakeholder awareness Consultation and discussion necessary to create stakeholder ownership Monitorable goals and constant evaluation key to improving performance Rapid adjustment needed in light of experience and changing circumstances ©Knowledge for Development, WBIAnnex: Annex ©Knowledge for Development, WBIExamples of World Bank Work on KE: Examples of World Bank Work on KE Detailed Knowledge Economy Assessments Completed: Korea (2000), China (2002), Chile(2003), Lithuania (2003) In process: Latvia, Poland, Turkey, Mexico, Tunisia World Bank goes beyond knowledge assessments to help countries develop concrete strategies and actual investments in specific knowledge economy areas such as: Updating economic incentive and institutional regime Research and development and innovation projects Education and life-long learning ICT ©Knowledge for Development, WBIInnovation Indicators: Innovation Indicators ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide53: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI CyprusSlide54: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Czech RepublicSlide55: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI EstoniaSlide56: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI HungarySlide57: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI LatviaSlide58: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI LithuaniaSlide59: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI PolandSlide60: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI SlovakiaSlide61: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI SloveniaSlide62: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Performance VariablesSlide63: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Governance VariablesSlide64: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Gender VariablesSlide65: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Shares of Global GDP (US$ current)Slide66: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI GDP PPP Current International (US$) You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
01 Carl Dahlman WBI Aric85 Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 88 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (0) Dislike it (0) Added: March 18, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 0 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... Premium member Presentation Transcript The Challenge of the Knowledge Economy for Countries of Eastern and Central Europe and the EC: The Challenge of the Knowledge Economy for Countries of Eastern and Central Europe and the EC ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Carl Dahlman World Bank Institute Knowledge Economy Forum III: Improving Competitiveness Through a Knowledge Based Economy Budapest, March 23, 2004 Structure of Presentation: Structure of Presentation The Knowledge Revolution Benchmarking Countries on the Knowledge Economy Challenges for Eastern and Central European Countries Moving Forward-The Bigger Picture ©Knowledge for Development, WBINew Growth Patterns: New Growth Patterns In last decade there has been renewed interest in growth because: Micro level evidence of increasing importance of new technologies ICT revolution Increased share of high tech products in exports Managerial and organizational changes Macro level evidence of changes of patterns and nature of growth among OECD countries Surprisingly strong growth of US economy 1995-2002 Reversal of trend towards convergence of per capita income among OECD countries. This has lead to focus on “new economy” to understand what is going on ©Knowledge for Development, WBIThe Knowledge Revolution: The Knowledge Revolution Ability to create, access and use knowledge is becoming fundamental determinant of global competitiveness Seven key elements of “Knowledge Revolution” Increased codification of knowledge and development of new technologies Closer links with science base/increased rate of innovation/shorter product life cycles Increased importance of education & up-skilling of labor force, and life-long learning Investment in Intangibles (R&D,education, software) greater than Investments in Fixed Capital in OECD ©Knowledge for Development, WBIThe Knowledge Revolution -2: The Knowledge Revolution -2 Greater value added now comes from investment in intangibles such as branding, marketing, distribution, information management Innovation and productivity increase more important in competitiveness & GDP growth Increased Globalization and Competition Trade/GDP from 38% in 1990 to 57% in 2001 Value added by TNCs 27% of global GDP Bottom Line: Constant Change and Competition Implies Need for Constant Restructuring and Upgrading ©Knowledge for Development, WBIImplications for Eastern & Central European Countries: Implications for Eastern & Central European Countries As Eastern and Central European countries increasingly integrate with Europe and rest of the world they will be under increased pressure to improve their: economic incentive and institutional regime, investment climate and ability to re-deploy resources to the most efficient uses. They risk falling behind because they also have to strengthen basic infrastructures in: education information and communications and innovation They need to develop strategies to use existing and new knowledge to: improve performance in traditional sectors exploit opportunities for leapfrogging develop competitive new sectors ©Knowledge for Development, WBIFramework for Using K4D:Four Key Functional Areas : Framework for Using K4D: Four Key Functional Areas Economic incentive and institutional regime that provides incentives for the efficient use of existing and new knowledge and the flourishing of entrepreneurship Educated, creative and skilled people Dynamic information infrastructure Effective national innovation system ©Knowledge for Development, WBIKAM Methodology: KAM Methodology KAM: 76 structural/qualitative variables to benchmark performance on 4 pillars Variables normalized from 0 (worst) to 10 (best) for 121 countries www.worldbank.org/kam Basic scorecard for 14 variables at two points in time, 1995 and 2002 Aggregate knowledge economy index (KEI) ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide9: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary, Czech Republic, Poland (most recent)Slide10: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Knowledge Economy IndexSlide11: Global Competitiveness Indicators ©Knowledge for Development, WBISituation of Transition Economies: Situation of Transition Economies In spite of significant progress, still need to improve economic and institutional regime to reach EC levels ICT infrastructure and applications still low relative to EC levels Educational attainment gap narrower in accession countries, but education and training still suffer from rigidity, too specialized and fragmented challenge of life-long learning, brain drain Innovation system is weakest in terms of R&D inputs and outputs, also in terms of drawing on global knowledge, and the interaction among key troika: R&D institutes Universities Productive enterprises ©Knowledge for Development, WBICompetitiveness Challenges: Competitiveness Challenges Low productivity and low investment rate Most of productive sector outmoded if not obsolete, except for pockets of modernity, based largely on recent FDI Competitiveness based primarily on low wages or natural resources Skills levels not always up to new needs Few links to global value chains except for autos and electronics Poor links between productive sector, domestic research institutes, and universities ©Knowledge for Development, WBIStrategies of Using Knowledge for Development: Strategies of Using Knowledge for Development Have to be tailored to specific realities of each country Involve different trade-offs Are not just about ICT or high technology,but about broader economic strategies Require coordination across functional areas (hence our 4 pillars of KE) and among government, business and civil society ©Knowledge for Development, WBIKey Elements of Economic Incentive & Institutional Regime : Key Elements of Economic Incentive & Institutional Regime Competitive environment as stimulus for improved performance Financial system that mobilizes and allocates capital to its most productive uses Flexible labor markets including support for up-skilling and re-skilling Appropriate legal, tax, regulatory system and strong rule of law that support entrepreneurship Effective safety nets to facilitate adjustment to constant restructuring Effective, transparent and accountable government ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide16: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Economic Incentive RegimeSlide17: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Economic Regime VariablesKey Elements in Information Infrastructure: Key Elements in Information Infrastructure Communications infrastructure (from radio to internet) Telecom issues (competition, pricing, regulation) Digital Divide (access, content, language) Use E-govt, E-business, E-education, E-health Legal and regulatory regime for E-economy Software Skills to use ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide19: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI ICTSlide20: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: ICT VariablesKey Elements in Human Resources: Key Elements in Human Resources Access to different levels of education Gender balance Quality of educational content (core technical & social skills, relevance, creativity) Balance among different levels of education Financing & public and private roles Life-long learning opportunities Role of the ministry of education and its relations with labor, market, and economy ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide22: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI EducationSlide23: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Education VariablesKey Elements in National Innovation System: Key Elements in National Innovation System Tapping into Global Knowledge Trade, foreign investment, tech transfer, Technical journals, travel, internet, conferences Creating and adapting knowledge Pubic vs private R&D; Basic vs applied R&D From specialized research institutions to production Disseminating Knowledge Growth of more efficient enterprises Suppliers of equipment, technical services and info Extension services: agricultural Using knowledge Depends on cost and benefits Depends on education, skills, complementary inputs Depends on economic and institutional regime ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide25: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI InnovationSlide26: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Innovation (absolute version)Slide27: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Innovation Systems VariablesSlide28: European Innovation Scoreboard 2002- Candidate Countries ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide29: R&D Expenditures as % of GDP ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide30: Scientists & Engineers in R&D ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide31: Scientific and Technical Journals ©Knowledge for Development, WBIConceptual Framework for Innovation in Developing Countries: Conceptual Framework for Innovation in Developing Countries Innovation in developing countries should be understood broadly as something new to the local environment Therefore distinguish two broad types of innovation Local improvements through adoption of existing foreign technology Development of technologies new to world ©Knowledge for Development, WBIInnovation in Developing Countries: Innovation in Developing Countries In developing countries the first type is the most relevant, the second is rarer, except for the more advanced developing countries Developing countries will get a bigger economic impact from raising average local practice to best world practice than from creation of their own new knowledge They will also get a bigger impact from raising average local practice to best local practice, therefore the critical importance of domestic diffusion ©Knowledge for Development, WBISources of Domestic Innovation: Sources of Domestic Innovation Imports of capital goods, components, products or services Products and services brought to and produced in country by foreign investors Copying or reverse engineering of foreign products and services Technological efforts of domestic or foreign firms, not all of which are based on formal R&D ©Knowledge for Development, WBIBias Towards Formal R&D Efforts: Bias Towards Formal R&D Efforts Policy makers in developing countries tend to focus on formal R&D and on publicly funded research efforts They tend to focus on glamorous high technology sectors They tend to focus on industry, to a lesser extent on agriculture, and very little on services They also tend to focus on R&D inputs and outputs, not so much on entrepreneurship and management, or links to broader economic and institutional regime ©Knowledge for Development, WBIChallenges: Challenges But, as noted earlier, focus of policymakers is not the most important elements of the innovation system in developing countries R&D not the main source of innovation High tech sectors are tiny part of developing economies Service sector is largest share of economic activity Successfully applying knowledge requires entrepreneurship, management, organizations,and also depends on economic and institutional regime Need a better conceptual framework and policy tool kit that Differentiates across countries Provides made to measure policy advice and specific project design ©Knowledge for Development, WBIDifferentiated Strategies: Differentiated Strategies ©Knowledge for Development, WBINational Innovation System: National Innovation System Needs to include not just R&D institutions and universities, but most critically firms and other knowledge institutions Technical information & extension services Metrology, standards, testing, quality control Technical and management consulting Specialized suppliers, networks, Clusters and inter-firm interactions Seed and venture capital Needs to include attention to the broader economic incentive and institutional regime, education and skills, and ICT-hence our K4D framework ©Knowledge for Development, WBIChallenges for Eastern and Central European Countries: Challenges for Eastern and Central European Countries Finding advantageous ways to plug into and compete successfully in the global system Tapping global knowledge Getting into global value chains Moving up these value chains Taking advantage of global knowledge to improve welfare Preventive health Agriculture Developing differentiated advantages Building on local resources Building on culture and other intangibles Strengthening non-traded services ©Knowledge for Development, WBIMoving Forward-The Bigger Picture: Moving Forward-The Bigger Picture Progress and Challenges to the EC Challenges to the Enlarged EC Challenges for Non-Candidate Countries ©Knowledge for Development, WBIProgress and Challenges to EC: Progress and Challenges to EC Progress Significant integration in product market Significant integration to single currency Increase in regional stability Challenges Low productivity growth, low economic growth and lack of convergence Challenges compounded by aging population/increasing dependency ratios Losing global market share ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide42: 15 Most Populous Economies: Population 2002 (billions) ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide43: 15 Largest Economies: GDP 2002 (Trillions of international $) United States $10.14t China $5.73t South Korea $0.78t India $2.69t Indonesia $0.66t Mexico $0.88t Brazil $1.31t Spain $0.85t United Kingdom $1.51t Italy $1.48t France $1.55t Germany $2.17t Canada $0.90t Japan 3.26 -3 -1 1 3 5 7 9 0 5,000 10,000 15,000 20,000 25,000 30,000 35,000 GDP per capita (international $) 2002 Ave RGDP per capita growth 1990-2002 (%) Russia $1.41t ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide44: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI GDP (US$ Current) 1990-2002Slide45: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Shares of Global GDP (US$ Current In/nal PPP)Prospects for Enlarged EC: Prospects for Enlarged EC Increased market integration and specialization, stability, and prosperity Strong restructuring pressure on accession countries, but also pressure on current 15 Need for still greater integration in services (network industries and financial), labor legislation and labor mobility, and tax regimes Challenge of coordination across enlarged set of national systems Need to increase productivity and growth.This will require Continue improvements in economic and institutional regime Strengthening education, research and innovation ©Knowledge for Development, WBIChallenges to Non-Candidate Countries: Challenges to Non-Candidate Countries European countries not part of EC 25 are going to face greater challenges as world moves toward three large economic blocks Do not benefit from as much pressure to reform economic incentive and institutional regime Do not receive structural funds or technical support Will have to undertake more of necessary reforms and restructuring on their own Will be more difficult, Greater risks of falling further behind Will have to be more proactive in seeking alliances with EC and other blocks ©Knowledge for Development, WBIChallenges Ahead: Challenges Ahead Very dynamic situation with moving goalposts & risk of increasing knowledge divide between advanced and developing countries and with-in countries Need to raise awareness among policy makers, private sector and civil society in developing countries Need to develop coherent strategies to take advantage of opportunities and reduce adverse impact ©Knowledge for Development, WBIThe Way Forward-Conclusion: The Way Forward-Conclusion Critical to go from analysis of problems to concrete initiatives to improve KE performance Successful further reform requires creating stakeholder awareness Consultation and discussion necessary to create stakeholder ownership Monitorable goals and constant evaluation key to improving performance Rapid adjustment needed in light of experience and changing circumstances ©Knowledge for Development, WBIAnnex: Annex ©Knowledge for Development, WBIExamples of World Bank Work on KE: Examples of World Bank Work on KE Detailed Knowledge Economy Assessments Completed: Korea (2000), China (2002), Chile(2003), Lithuania (2003) In process: Latvia, Poland, Turkey, Mexico, Tunisia World Bank goes beyond knowledge assessments to help countries develop concrete strategies and actual investments in specific knowledge economy areas such as: Updating economic incentive and institutional regime Research and development and innovation projects Education and life-long learning ICT ©Knowledge for Development, WBIInnovation Indicators: Innovation Indicators ©Knowledge for Development, WBISlide53: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI CyprusSlide54: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Czech RepublicSlide55: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI EstoniaSlide56: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI HungarySlide57: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI LatviaSlide58: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI LithuaniaSlide59: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI PolandSlide60: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI SlovakiaSlide61: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI SloveniaSlide62: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Performance VariablesSlide63: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Governance VariablesSlide64: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Hungary: Gender VariablesSlide65: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI Shares of Global GDP (US$ current)Slide66: ©Knowledge for Development, WBI GDP PPP Current International (US$)