What we really need from innovation in Australia

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By Ron Johnston, University of Sydney

The tone of commentary about the appropriateness and effectiveness of innovation as a centrepiece of Australian government policy has turned from one of enthusiasm, particularly among the startup community, to pessimism and even rejection.

Just a day after the federal election, it had already been pointed out that innovation politics had paid out some harsh lessons for the Coalition. The issue was not only the loss of Wyatt Roy, the assistant minister for innovation, but the electorate appearing unreceptive to Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s “ideas boom” mantra.

It seems the message of an exciting future through innovation and high-tech startups has palpably failed to engage the Australian community.

Should we be surprised? Did innovation ever have sufficient potency or reach as a concept to transform the Australian economy?

The need for innovation

First, it is important to reiterate that the many arguments made over the years, and myriad research findings, emphatically support the role of innovation in the modern economy.

The globally competitive nature of the modern economy requires companies to continually improve their products, services and business processes if they are to survive.

Innovation makes immediate sense in the corporate environment because of this competitive pressure. Doing the same thing over again just invites imitation and displacement.

Not that producing and managing innovation is easy. By its very simple definition of “doing new and better things”, innovation does not lend itself easily to rule-based procedures.

Innovation is inherently rule-breaking. Hence the myriad top ten tips for innovation are almost invariably pointless. If you are following someone else’s rules, you are not innovating.

At a national level, establishing effective and enduring systems of research, development, engagement and commercialisation remains a significant challenge.

This is shown not only by Australia’s relatively poor performance in international comparative measures of innovation performance, and the fact that it’s last out of the 34 OECD members for economic complexity, but also by the high level of analysis and policy reform in countries that outperform Australia.

What inspires innovation?

The lessons we have learnt is that innovation arises from an uncertain combination of creative minds, space to experiment and fail, modest financial support, a supportive environment, passion and risk-taking, in relatively small portions.

The current intense activity and hype in the startup space is less about creating a new generation of billionaires, and more about realising a new, intensive approach to the pursuit and capture of innovation.

But when we move into the policy context, and even more importantly the political context, the meaning and role of innovation becomes far more problematic. The American astronomer Carl Sagan said:

We’ve arranged a society on science and technology in which nobody understands anything about science and technology […]

I would paraphrase this to say we live in a society exquisitely dependent on innovation, in which hardly anyone knows anything about innovation.

Innovation is such a loose, umbrella concept that it can mean many different things to different people. More significantly, innovation is only ever a means to an end. New products, jobs, economic growth, profitability are what we want from innovation.

But too often innovation is treated as an end in its own right, implying that if we only change something – anything – life will be better. It reminds me of the possibly apocryphal manager demanding of his staff that they increase their innovation production rate from two to three and a half per week – “just get out there and innovate!”

What the public want

What do we know of public attitudes to innovation? Reliable opinion poll data are scarce.

But if we draw on politicians, whose central survival skill is understanding people’s interests and concerns, we find Ed Husic, Labor’s innovation spokesman who said:

If I went and had this (innovation policy) debate in the Mt Druitt library I don’t think many people would get what we are talking about. A lot of those people think what you do and what we argue for is a job killer […]

The other issue that is contentious is whether technology is only going to make rich people richer. Is it only going to accumulate benefits to one portion of society that is already doing well?

All the positive arguments about the need to transition from a resources-based to a knowledge economy (not that the two are mutually exclusive) will require a much broader framing than facilitating startups and venture capital investment.

It involves a profound reshaping of the understanding of what is and will be the nature of a job, what skills are necessary to be able to get that job or deliver that service, and how that provides the basis for the desired life quality. A much larger narrative is waiting to be written.

Throughout history, there have always been winners and losers in times of great change. At least some of our commitment to innovation needs to be in finding new ways to ease economic, social and psychological transitionsThe Conversation

Ron Johnston is the executive director of the Australian Centre for Innovation at the University of Sydney

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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