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Dr. Sanjaya Lall

Dr. Sanjaya Lall. Professor, Developmental Economics Oxford University, UK. Dr. Sanjaya Lall. Former Senior Economist, World Bank Advisor, Technology Policy, Innovation, Competitiveness, Industrial Technology, Foreign Direct Investment, Trade, Monitoring & Evaluation Systems

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Dr. Sanjaya Lall

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  1. Dr. Sanjaya Lall Professor, Developmental Economics Oxford University, UK

  2. Dr. Sanjaya Lall • Former Senior Economist, World Bank • Advisor, Technology Policy, Innovation, Competitiveness, Industrial Technology, Foreign Direct Investment, Trade, Monitoring & Evaluation Systems • Former Senior Research Officer, Institute of Economics and Statistics, Oxford

  3. Monitoring and evaluation of innovation projects & programs Sanjaya Lall

  4. Need for monitoring and evaluation (M&E) • All investment proposals need to be evaluated if they compete for resources • All projects and programs have to be monitored for effective implementation, meeting deadlines and ensuring discipline in spending, purchasing and so on • All projects and programs must be evaluated during and after completion to ensure that direct and social objectives are achieved

  5. M&E is exceptionally difficult for innovation projects & programs • Highly speculative and uncertain nature of innovation results: problem exists even within enterprises in allocating R&D budgets • But public projects face other problems: • Public goods nature of many outputs • Non-measurable nature of benefits of programs to • Create inter-firm & inter-industry linkages • Strengthen linkages between industry and research institutions • Even more diffuse nature of stimulating ‘technology culture’, modernization etc.

  6. Nature of M&E depends on nature of innovation project Stimulate enterprise R&D Upgrade S&T institutions Strengthen linkages of TIs with industry Fund technology based firms (VCs, etc.) Improve IPR regime/ implementation

  7. Two major components • Benefits to the economy • Achievement of specific project objectives

  8. Inherently qualitative and diffuse nature of innovation benefits gives rise to large number of possible M&E measures

  9. Economic benefits: three levels of analysis • Trends at the general economy-wide or industrial level • Before and after project • International benchmarks • Analysis of enterprises and institutions covered by project • Comparisons of enterprises within project with those outside it

  10. Economic benefits: measures • R&D spending • Patents, publications • Competitiveness (in technology products?) • Labour productivity (or TFP) • Spin-offs, ‘technopreneurs’ • Employment (total or skilled, mfg or R&D?) • International R&D collaboration • Technology balance of payments • Inward and outward FDI (technology based)

  11. Other possible measures, more industry specific… • Quality standards and reject rates • Order to delivery times • Customer satisfaction ratings • Inter-firm collaboration • Cluster effects: local purchases, joint training and R&D, other links

  12. Economic benefits: sources of data • General industrial, trade and R&D data within country • Benchmarks from other countries • Industrial census (with additional data on technology) • Questionnaires to firms & institutions within and outside project • Interviews with firms and institutions in project

  13. Economic benefits: methodology • Benchmarking over time or across countries • Econometric analysis of enterprises within & outside project • Case studies

  14. Project objectives: three components (for implementing agencies) • Inputs • Outputs • Outcomes

  15. Inputs… • Extent to which implementation meets targets on schedule, e.g.: • Disbursement of project funds • Purchases of equipment • Construction of facilities • Other milestones

  16. Outputs, depending on agency… • Speed of processing patent applications • Extent of metrology needs met, conformance to international standards • % of budget earned from industry (contracts or research) • Restructuring, international accreditation etc. of laboratories • No. of R&D contracts, commercialization, no. of publications (impact), patents • Number of technology loans, repayment rates • Venture capital funding: extent, success

  17. Outcomes (broad economic impact)… • Part are already covered under analysis of economic benefits • More specific measures of performance by institutions and firms directly involved in project

  18. Specific performance measures • Enterprises • Growth and nature of R&D • R&D management • Access to technology financing • Access to MSTQ services • Efficiency of IPR regime • Extent of interaction with technology institutions, universities, etc. • Export and productivity performance

  19. R&D: Internal institutional culture, responsiveness to and links with industry, spin-offs MSTQ: Increased efficiency of services, effects on productivity, competitiveness, FDI VC: Stimulation of hi-tech start-ups, IPOs General: Improvement of R&D performance and creation of ‘technology culture’, use of new technologies in production & exports, attraction of MNC R&D facilities and contracts, outward FDI, ‘cluster’ effects. Specific performance measures: institutions

  20. Who does M&E? • Project agencies provide information on project inputs and outputs • Data is collected by statistical & project agencies, questionnaires administered by independent researchers • Analysis carried out by independent researchers

  21. Dr. Sanjaya Lall Professor, Developmental Economics Oxford University, UK

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