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WBI KE Finland Helsinki 30-31 August 2004 NEW PARADIGMS FOR INTERNATIONAL KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY

WBI KE Finland Helsinki 30-31 August 2004 NEW PARADIGMS FOR INTERNATIONAL KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY Professor Jorma Routti Helsinki University of Technology & CIM Creative Industries Management Former President of Sitra & Director General of Research DG of European Commision

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WBI KE Finland Helsinki 30-31 August 2004 NEW PARADIGMS FOR INTERNATIONAL KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY

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  1. WBI KE Finland Helsinki 30-31 August 2004 NEW PARADIGMS FOR INTERNATIONAL KNOWLEDGE-BASED ECONOMY Professor Jorma Routti Helsinki University of Technology & CIM Creative Industries Management Former President of Sitra & Director General of Research DG of European Commision www.cimfunds.com jorma.routti@cimfunds.com

  2. Finland in the European technology cooperation Finland is participating in 840projects in the Vth FrameworkProgramme and receives EUR 200Million EU financing. EU R&Dpro- grammes Industrial R&D cooperation. Thereare 700 projects in execution; Finland is involved in 60 of themwith a volume of EUR 50 Million. EUREKA Cooperation in scientific and technicalresearch. Annual volume in Finlandis about EUR 30 Million. Finland isinvolved in over 2/3 of the projects. COST Finland a member since 1995.Finland's contribution was overEUR 13 Million in 2000 and Finnishindustrial return from ESA was 98 %. ESA EuropeanSpaceAgency International Energy Agency of OECD.Finland is taking part in 40 projectsunder 20 research contracts. IEA A 09 / 01-06

  3. Public sector activities of R&D in Finland PARLIAMENT GOVERNMENT Science andTechnologyPolicyCouncil Ministry ofTrade andIndustry Ministry ofEducation Other ministriesand theirinstitutes Academy ofFinland Tekes Sitra Finnvera Oyj Finpro Universities VTT Regional TE-Centres A01/ 99-12

  4. V I S I O N ECONOMY SAFETY SUSTAINABILITY SOLIDARITY SKENARIOS FOR OPERATING ENVIRONMENT S W O T CURRENT STATE

  5. R&D input in some OECD countries Percentage of GDP 4.5 Israel Sweden 4.0 FINLAND Japan 3.5 Iceland USA 3.0 South Korea Germany 2.5 OECD total France Singapore 2.0 Denmark Canada 1.5 Great Britain Austria 1.0 Norway China 0.5 est. Sources: OECD, Main Science and Technology Indicators database,Statistics Finland (Finland 2002) and Statistiska centralbyrån (Sweden 2001, estimate). Docs 36109 02-2003

  6. The share of high tech exportsin some OECD countries 1988-2001 Exports of Finnish high tech products totalled9.9 billion euros in 2001, i.e. 21 % of total exports of goods. USA Japan UnitedKingdom Netherlands FINLAND Switzerland France Sweden Germany Denmark % of total exports of goods EU Norway Source: Statistics Finland, according to the OECD product catalogue defined in 1995 Docs 32187 B 03 /02-03

  7. R&D intensity and GDP growthin some countries R&D intensity, % 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 7.0 8.0 9.0 Real growth in GDP 95-99, % Source: Statistics Finland A 07B/ 01-06

  8. Public sector activities of R&D in Finland PARLIAMENT GOVERNMENT Science andTechnologyPolicyCouncil Ministry ofTrade andIndustry Ministry ofEducation Other ministriesand theirinstitutes Academy ofFinland Tekes Sitra Finnvera Oyj Finpro Universities VTT Regional TE-Centres A01/ 99-12

  9. Forest Industry Cluster Poyry Design and Consulting Pulp Mills Sunds Design, manufacting and maintenance • Valmet Paper Machines • Design, manufacturing and remote operations Timberjack Forest Harvestors World wide marketing Paper, cardboard, packaging material • Production • Focus on specific market segments and products • Brasil, South Africa, China, Indonesia • Manufacturing and Operations

  10. Shifting Responsibilities for Economic Development Old Model New Model • Government drives economic development through policy decisions and incentives • Economic development is a collaborative process involving government at multiple levels, companies, teaching and research institutions, and institutions for collaboration

  11. E enlightenment W wisdom U understanding K knowledge I information D data  Jorma.Routti@cimfunds.com

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