1 / 30

Towards 2018: South Africa’s 10-Year National Innovation Plan

Towards 2018: South Africa’s 10-Year National Innovation Plan. Presented by: Dr Phil Mjwara, Director General, Department of Science & Technology Tuesday, 20 Nov 2007. Contents. Economic Transformation towards a Knowledge Economy SA’s “Grand Challenges”

selena
Download Presentation

Towards 2018: South Africa’s 10-Year National Innovation Plan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Towards 2018:South Africa’s 10-Year National Innovation Plan Presented by: Dr Phil Mjwara, Director General, Department of Science & Technology Tuesday, 20 Nov 2007

  2. Contents • Economic Transformation towards a Knowledge Economy • SA’s “Grand Challenges” • Innovation as a National Imperative • Innovation Instruments • Human Capital Development • S&T Across Government • Conclusion

  3. Policy landscape NSI SWOT Benchmarked OECD Review of SA NSI New public S&T missions • Biotechnology • ICT • Advanced manufacturing • Astronomy 10Yr Innovation Plan Creation of DST Knowledge-based economy, linked to NIPF & other initiatives • Grand challenges • Human capital development R&D Strategy S&T missions Developing the NSI S&T White Paper 2004 1996 2002 2007

  4. Stage of technology development 1 = Early phase 2 = Growth phase 3 = Efficiency phase Information age Degree of technological maturity and market saturation 3 3 Age of steam 2 2 1 1 Bio-economy 1 1971 2007 1850s 1829 Time Economic Transformation

  5. Towards a Knowledge Economy KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY RESOURCE-BASED ECONOMY

  6. The Knowledge Economy The Four Pillars of the Knowledge Economy

  7. Economic & Scientific Wealth Source: DA King, Nature 430 (2004) 311 (15 July 2004)

  8. Towards a Knowledge Economy • Economic growth is driven by Innovation • Knowledge is the basic form of capital for Innovation • Knowledge generation, accumulation and exploitation • Key driver for Innovation is “high-end” human capital: PhD • PhD as the key foundation for achieving the objectives of the National System of Innovation (NSI)

  9. Principles of the 10 Year Innovation Plan Principles informing 10 Year Innovation Plan: • Articulates an innovation path to contribute fundamentally towards the transformation of the economy to a knowledge economy; • Informed by ‘triage’ in decision-making i.t.o: • Focus on SA’s areas of competence; • Global Objectives; • Societal transformation; and • Based on premise that government’s growth targets require a significant investment in innovation

  10. “Grand Challenges” • Farmer to Pharma value chain to strengthen the bio-economy; • Space S&T; • Energy security; • Global-change science (climate change); and • Human and social dynamics.

  11. Technology development and innovation Farmer to pharma Human & social dynamics Global change Energy Space science Human capital - South African research chairs initiative, professional development programme, etc. Enablers Cross- cutting enablers Grand challenges Knowledge infrastructure – Science councils, state-owned enterprises, global projects Knowledge Generation

  12. Knowledge Generation • Early-stage research (for example nanotechnology where the innovation is uncertain and projected well into the future); • Science missions (exploiting the ‘living laboratories’ of local resources and geographic advantage to generate meaningful scientific research outputs/knowledge products);

  13. Knowledge Generation and exploitation • Technology missions (for example advanced manufacturing where innovation is possible in the near future); • Conventional sectors (institutional mandates for growing the research base such that the entire sector and the economy constantly benefits, for example agriculture or health).

  14. Basic Applied Tech Develop Transfer & Proliferation COEs Competency Centres DOE/NRF NRF/DST DST/TIA PBF/DTI • Research Chairs • PGP & HCD instruments • RISA instruments • Innovation Fund • BRICs • SPII & PII • SEDA • Khula • IDC Publications/new knowledge Patents/new knowledge products

  15. Basic Applied Tech Develop Transfer & Proliferation NRF IDC TIA Specialist Research Funds Venture Capital International Research Funds SEDA PBF Publications/new knowledge Patents/new knowledge products

  16. IP Support TI Fund Venture Capital Access Enterprise Development Competency Centres Hydrogen Economy BRICS AMI AMTS

  17. Innovation as a National Competence • Technology Innovation Agency (TIA) • Intellectual Property Rights Bill (IPR) • Centres of Competence • Public Benefit Foundation (PBF) • Regional Innovation Systems • Technology Parks

  18. Human Capital Development • Increase the number of knowledge workers: Researchers • Increase the productivity of researchers • Address inequalities: Race, gender, regional & institutional distribution • Introducing appropriate Innovation Instruments in the National System of Innovation

  19. Knowledge-based Economies

  20. Strategic Positioning South Africa In 2026 (20 yrs) A 5 x increase to present situation IN WHICH LEAGUE DO WE WANT TO PLAY? South Africa In 2026 (20yrs) A 10 x increaseto future situation

  21. Existing National SET pipeline (2005) Masters ~ per yr (incl. coursework) PhD’s ~ per yr Hons grad rates~ per yr HG Maths and Science ~ per yr SET graduation rates ~per yr 26,000 3,200 15,991 2,900 561 Points of leverage from current situation • < 10% proceed from a basic degree to pursue honours • 2. Only 19% proceed from Masters to Doctoral studies 1 2

  22. Research Outputs:Scientific Journals

  23. Research Outputs:International Comparison

  24. Research Outputs:Patents

  25. S&T Across Govt • Inter-Departmental S&T initiatives (Technology Managers Forum); • Infrastructure investment in line with ASGISA (i.e. rail, road, air, energy, etc.); • Public procurement innovation (support local innovations incl. SMME’s and techno start-ups); and • Monitoring S&T in SA (annual reviews, surveys and patent statistics).

  26. OECD Review: Key Findings • Human Capital for SET is sub-optimal. • A long term planning Framework is needed. • The governance framework needs more vertical and horizontal integration. • There is an innovation chasm with an insufficient number of research products directly influencing the real economy. • Science, Technology and Innovation for the 2nd economy should be more pronounced and visible.

  27. Conclusion… • Application of knowledge to generate new products and services; • Five “grand challenges” as a mechanism to create focus and developing a research agenda with specific national outcomes; • Ensure innovation as a national competence is strengthened by appropriate mechanisms (i.e. TIA; Centres of Competence); • Enhance country’s ability to generate knowledge including early stage research areas;

  28. Conclusion (cont.) • Infrastructure • Internationalisation of our Research Enterprise

  29. KE A LEBOGA#(121340)

More Related