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  • Achieving Nations Competitiveness

    Through Science, Technology, and Innovation

    Yanuar Nugroho

    Deputy Chief of Staff for Analysis and Strategic Issues

    On Sicial, Cultural, and Ecological Affairs

    Executive Office of the President, Republic Indonesia

    [email protected]

    Solo, 9 August 2016

  • 3

    Making Innovation Works Lesson Learned From Other Countries (1/5)

    Clarity on Science & Technology policy framework underpins the Innovation System in the UK

    Clear vision

    Clear direction

    Clear priority

    Clear institutional setup

  • 4

    VISION REGARDING RESEARCH AGENDA HAS TO

    FIRST BE DEFINED

    Learning from European Research Area ERA (Green

    Paper 04.04.07)

    1. ERA Vision:

    The European Research Area will deeply root

    knowledge in society and free Europes knowledge

    potential in all its dimensions: people, infrastructures,

    organisations, funding, knowledge circulation and

    global cooperation (p.9)

    2. Making ERA vision reality

    1. Promoting mobility of researchers

    2. Developing research infrastructures

    3. Strengthening research institutions

    4. Sharing knowledge

    5. Optimising research programme and priorities

    6. International cooperation

    GRAND CHALLENGES SHOULD THEN BE

    DESIGNED TO STIMULATE RESEARCH STREAMS

    GRAND CHALLENGES

    are of sufficient scale and scope to capture the

    public and political imagination, create widespread

    interest among scientific and business communities

    and NGOs and inspire younger people. They must be

    capable of acting as an important tool for percolating

    attention at all levels of society all the way down to

    civil society and the public at large. (EUR 23326,

    2008:37)

    CRITERIA for the GC:

    1. Is it relevant to address at the EU level?

    2. Is there a clear research dimension contribution?

    3. Is it feasible as an economic or social investment?

    problem of embeddedness

    Making Innovation Works Lesson Learned From Other Countries (2/5)

  • 5

    GRAND CHALLENGES SHOULD THEN BE

    DESIGNED TO STIMULATE RESEARCH STREAMS

    (continued)

    PRIORITIZATION WOULD HELP TO OPTIMIZE

    RESOURCE ALLOCATION

    GRAND CHALLENGES

    1. Water security

    2. Energy security

    3. Disease

    4. Sustainable

    development

    5. Aging & demography

    6. Globalisation

    7. Social cohesion

    8. Work-life balance

    9. Behavioural change

    10. Trust in governments

    11. Urbanisation

    12. Prosperity & Stability

    13. Exclusion & poverty

    14. Social pathologies

    15. Coexistence &

    conflicts

    16. Crime & corruption

    17. Ethics of science &

    technology

    18. Knowledge divides

    19. Techno-security

    20. Food security

    FRAMEWORK PROGRAMME 7 (FP-7)

    RESEARCH PRIORITISATION

    1. Information & Communication

    Technology

    2. Health (including medical)

    3. Transport

    4. Nanotechnology

    5. Energy (including

    renewable/green energy)

    6. Food and Agro (including

    consumption)

    7. Environment (including climate

    change)

    8. Space

    9. Security

    10. Social Sciences & Humanities

    1. Ideas (blue-sky res.)

    2. People

    3. Capacities

    4. EUratom

    5. Joint Research Capacity

    Making Innovation Works Lesson Learned From Other Countries (3/5)

  • 6

    ROBUST INSTITUTIONAL SETUP WOULD THEN TAKE AGENDA INTO SUCCESSFUL IMPLEMENTATION

    Institutional linkage and framework of coordination UK example

    Funding and Research Direction

    EU Level |European Research Council

    UK Level |UK Research Council

    Research and Commercialisation

    Universities and Patent Office

    Private Sector Third Sector

    Research Prioritisation and

    Localisation

    Local/ Regional Agencies

    Researc

    h fie

    ld R

    esearc

    h f

    ield

    Remarks

    Clear & measurable research agenda and

    priorities evaluation

    State direction, but organic evolution and

    emergence NOT forced.

    S&T Act 1967: ministries have great

    flexibilities to make/change adopt systems

    of innovation can coordination be

    legislated?

    Making Innovation Works Lesson Learned From Other Countries (4/5)

  • 7

    LESSON LEARNED FROM OTHER REGIONS

    Some lessons learned EU strong research policy

    o Aho report criticising failure to meet Lisbon target

    o Triple Helix as norm, despite (heavy) criticisms

    BRIC strong leadership

    o Clear technology policy (or at least, technological visions)

    o State plays a central role

    SEA clear objective

    o Singapore: clear policy, lead by state, influenced by business, supplied by university; (civil) society

    left behind market; services and service industries

    o Thailand: policy transfer, referring to EU techno park as manifestation of TH practices; strong role

    of government; central role of culture creative and services industry

    o Malaysia: technology centre; strong role of government, high level of institutional coordination; high

    participation of (civil) society; but lacking systems at national level

    India wide participation

    o Strong role of (civil) society, clear policy objective, facilitated by state, influenced by brain circulation

    Making Innovation Works Lesson Learned From Other Countries (5/5)

  • 8

    Critics to the Triple Helix Model

    (Etzkowitz & Leydesdorff, 2000)

    On Emergence Innovations and Why

    engaging the Third Sector

    When separate, local efforts connect

    with each other as networks, then

    strengthen as communities of practice,

    suddenly and surprisingly a new

    system emerges at a greater level of

    scale.(Wheatley & Frieze, 2006)

    Knowledge is also produced in the third

    sector

    Jugaad innovation in India one of a

    clear example that explains Emergence

    ACADEMIA

    STATE INDUSTRY

    THIRD

    SECTOR

    Emergence innovations introduce the needs to transform collaboration

  • 9

    Radio

    Komunitas K

    FM Dukun

    MGL

    Radio

    Komunitas

    Lintas Merapi

    Deles Klaten

    Radio

    Komunitas

    MMC FM Selo

    Boyolali

    Radio

    Komunitas

    Gema Merapi FM

    Cangkringan

    Sleman

    Radio

    Komunitas

    LAHARA FM

    Jumoyo MGL

    Connecting 5 community radio in Merapi's slope with online media, as disaster awareness and preparedness media in normal situation. When crisis occurs, JALIN Merapi functions as early warning system and coordinating stakeholders (local community members, volunteers, donors, media, etc.). In 2010, mainstream media used JALIN Merapi's information as the main reference on Mt. Merapi's eruption.

    JALIN Merapis Media Convergence: Community Radio + Two-way Communication Radio + CCTV + Fixed Telephone+ SMS Gateway + Website + Instant Messenger + Live Audio Streaming + Social Media

    Selected Case Study Local example Jalin Merapi

  • 10

    100 NATIONAL

    PRIORITIES 2015

    335 NATIONAL

    PRIORITIES 2016

    10 CLUSTERS

    OVERSIGHTED BY KSP

    Current national focus and priorities are in need of quality STI and Research outputs

  • 11

    Research and Evidence Based Policy Making is key to Improve National Competitiveness

    Competitiveness pillars can be leveraged through STI, research and

    evidence based policy making

  • 12

    We need to improve our current Science, Technology, Innovation (STI) Inputs and Outputs

    International Publication Comparison Among

    The ASEAN Countries - 1996-2014 Registered Patent Comparison Among Selected ASEAN

    Countries (USPTO 2005-2014)

    Researchers/

    Million Citizen 1,071 765 2,590 7,000 8,000

    GERD/ PDB 0.08% 0.39% 1.1% 2.0% 4.1%

    Indonesias STI inputs lags behind the neighboring countries

    resulting in unsurprisingly poor outputs

  • 13

    Key Takeaway - Revitalizing management of STI with Epistemic Community being the centerpiece is imperative

    STI Management

    Revitalization

    STI resource and

    ecosystem

    improvement

    Push for Evidence

    Based Policy Making

    Recommendations Action Items

    Revisit roles and functions of the STI actors (DRN, Ristekdikti, LIPI,

    BPPT, AIPI, etc.) to create an Epistemic Community in Indonesia which has

    the technocratic/ scientific influence rather than political

    Strengthening network and collaboration within the community and among

    STI stakeholders, including government, academic, private, and third sector

    Integrate research and STI agenda in Indonesia including harmonization

    with the nations development agenda

    Reforming researchers career path as the attempt to boost research output

    and productivity

    Develop clear roadmap to support the case of increasing R&D

    expenditure to GDP or national budget ratio

    Ensuring policy makers to make decision based on data while optimizing

    findings based on research

  • THANK YOU

  • Appendix

  • 16

    PEOPLE INNOVATION SHOULD NOT BE OVERLOOKED - Jalin Merapi (2/2)

    It was 5 November 2010, 19.30 [Indonesia time], when a call from a voluntary fieldworker alerted us. We received an emergency request from our Post at Wedi, Klaten, who just received refugees and now needed 6,000 portion of nasi bungkus (rice meal). That phone call was so desperate, asking us to tell the public about the need. We did not dare to promise anything as it was already night time. Who could have provided that much rice meal in such circumstance? However, we kept trying. Our admin team did everything they could. Some called other Posts but we did not get what we needed. Not even close. At 19.55, Nasir tweeted: #DONASI nasbung utk 6000 pengungsi di Pusdiklatpor Depo Kompi C, Wedi, Klaten. MALAM INI | Candy 081XXXXXXXXX [literally: #DONATION ricemeal for 6000 refugees at Pusdiklatpor Depo Kompi C, Wedi, Klaten, TONIGHT | Candy 081XXXXXXXX].

    We knew the tweet was re-tweeted by the followers of @Jalin Merapi. In half an hour, the phone rang again. The very volunteer in Klaten told us, gladly, that they have received the rice meal for the 6000 refugees. He wanted us to tell the public about the matter so that there would be no excess of rice meal. We were so glad and felt relieved. One of us tweeted: #DONASI Puslatpur Depo Kompi C, Wedi, Klaten sdh kelebihan stok nasbung. Air minum masih dibutuhkan [literally: #DONATION Puslatpur Depo Kompi C, Wedi, Klaten has received more than enough rice meals. Fresh water is still needed]. (ASD, Jalin Merapi volunteer, interview and written testimony, emailed 15/12/10)

    @JalinMerapi > 44.000 follower

    From Outside

    Indonesia 45% Other 61%

    COMPETITIVENESS THROUGH SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION

  • 17

    PEOPLE INNOVATION OFTEN RESULTS IN A MORE EFFICIENT SOLUTION

    Sub-district mobile internet service centre

    (M-PLIK) vs. ICTs for Emergency Situation

    (TIKUS DARAT)

    o Government vs. Civil society initiatives

    o Top-down vs. Bottom-up

    o 40-50k USD per unit vs. 5-15k USD per unit

    COMPETITIVENESS THROUGH SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION

  • 18

    RESULTS OF MULTI STAKEHOLDERS COLLABORATIONS LEARNING FROM OTHER COUNTRIES (2/2)

    The Jaipurfoot

    The need: prosthetics for the poor, which are durable, can be used for religious purposes (sitting on the floor), can be produced by low-skilled labours

    Result: Jaipurfoot costs US$30 (in the US: US$8k)

    Buffalo School by Chaipattana Foundation

    Modernisation in agriculture has brought modern machinery, rapidly replacing buffaloes that in the past always played an important role in rice cultivation and had a close relationship with the farmer's life.

    Tractors start to be used widely but there are problems: tractor damages the soil and farmers fall deeply into debt to buy tractors.

    When the farmers want to use buffaloes again, they do not know how to control them; and vice versa, the buffaloes, which have been away from the field, cannot plough anymore.

    COMPETITIVENESS THROUGH SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION

  • 19

    Selected Case Studies (1/2) Examples from India

    Mangalyaan

    India becomes the first Asian country to reach Mars, the 4th in the world

    Costs only US$75 million, three-quarter of the cost to make Gravity movie (compared to NASAs US$600 million mission to Mars)

    Tata Swach The need: clean, affordable water in remote, excluded

    society.

    Tata Chemicals innovated and invented a portable water purifier using nanotechnology, which does not require energy or electricity to operate, and has a replaceable filter (swach means clean in Hindi).

    Technology: rice-husk ash combined with nanotechnology

    Result: Each Swach costs Rs999 (US$22.50); sale projection: one million units per year; won the Gold Medal of the Asian Innovation Awards 2010; market expansion to Africa, Southeast Asia and Latin America

  • 18 Sept 2011 15 Sept 2012 5 Nov 2012 31 December 2012

    20

    RESULTS OF MULTI STAKEHOLDERS COLLABORATIONS LOCAL EXAMPLES

    Multistakeholder

    action research :

    PENCERAH

    NUSANTARA

    Deployment of voluntary, team-based healthcare service at the most remote areas of Indonesia to be integrated with the local system

    Involvement of government (central and local), private sector, civil society, media, academics.

    Data collection and subsequent analyses over time

    Started 2011, in 7 locations, with 35 volunteers

    Outcomes:

    o Improvement of health and well being in the locations of deployment

    o The model is adopted as the governments priority in 2015, in 120 locations, with nearly 1,000 health workers

    SMS 1708

    Website

    http://lapor.ukp.go.id

    Mobile Apps.

    Blackberry / Android

    Social Media Apps.

    @lapor_UKP4

    By November 2013: - Over 200.000 users - 1,400 reports per day - Connected to 534 municipals - Connected to 64 ministries

    +6285277227XXX (12 Sept 2011):

    A bridge at North Singkil District collapsed due to 2006 earthquake and has never been

    fixed since. Probably, this is because we do not have a local parliamentarian

    representing us at provincial level. The existence of this bridge is crucial to connect

    villages in the region.

    COMPETITIVENESS THROUGH SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION

    http://lapor.ukp.go.id

  • 21

    REFLECTIONS: WHY INNOVATION AND COLLABORATIONS MATTER

    o Fostering public participation in development policy making

    o Mobilising public knowledge and intelligence in shaping the future (foresight) through participatory policymaking and budgeting

    Widening citizens

    participation: Beyond click

    activism

    Collectively creating safer

    environment

    Pushing for clean, transparent,

    accountable, and effective

    bureaucracy that delivers

    quality public services

    o Wider public participation (including private sector and civil society) in developing and monitoring development using ICTs (social/new media, mobile technologies) is one of the factors that make development sustainable.

    o With ICT innovations, citizens can strategise their movement to demand for better public services, which will also drive for more transparent, accountable, and effective government performance.

    COMPETITIVENESS THROUGH SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION