The National Innovation and Science Agenda was
recently announced to great fanfare. There will doubtless be ongoing
forensic analysis of the proposals and, later, ruthless in-depth political
scrutiny and argument about the outcomes. With relatively minor exceptions, at
this stage, the proposals seem realistic and well aligned, although, of course,
interested parties are already saying they should have been allocated more
funding.
Having said that, the implicit
conceptualisation of innovation in the announcement has quite a narrow focus
around digital technology and science-based research, and there is a lack of
clarity with respect to the more practical aspects of commercialisation,
marketing, distribution and sales. It is possible the glare and glitz
associated with buzz words such as landing pads, incubators, start-ups,
eco-systems, coding, cyber security, and Silicon Valley, not to mention the
instantaneous global "vibe" of this whole area, has at least
temporarily blinded the leaders of the innovation blitz to very local opportunities.
Although not nearly as exciting, there might be less need to travel to Los
Angeles or Tel Aviv than at first appears to be the case, especially where
solutions in the commercialisation arena are sought.
Before further developing this
theme, it is useful to briefly consider the fundamental drivers of the current
situation. Clearly, the aim of the Turnbull administration is to translate
the Australian economy into one that increasingly creates and exports
innovative goods and services, because courtesy of declining commodity prices,
the previously successful model of exporting bulk quantities of natural
resources is beginning to creak at the seams. A cultural transformation
has been called for, where private enterprise becomes enthusiastic about funding
research and development initiated by scientists, engineers and technologists
based in universities and public institutions, as well as independent ICT
start-ups, and where innovators and researchers discover a new facility and
enthusiasm for collaboration with the wider business and investment
communities.
Unfortunately, there is an
underlying antipathy that characterises relationships between government,
academia and various levels of the private enterprise sector in
Australia. This, arguably, has its origins in and around colonial and
post-colonial-era philosophical and class differences between workers,
university academics, and business, farming, government and political elites,
even if all of this tension is well camouflaged by egalitarian mythology,
rhetoric and contemporary techno-babble. In fact, these underlying
cultural conditions, no matter how undesirable and unpalatable, have been
hundreds of years in the making and are deeply ingrained in the Australian
institutional psyche. This is unlikely to change much as a result of
alterations to government allocation of research funding, other financial or
taxation incentives or official encouragements. Although by no means
impossible, real collaboration between universities, government agencies and
the private sector in Australia will always have its special difficulties.
Cultural and historical legacies
are also likely to be at least partly responsible for academic, business,
government and political elites who talk up Australian business and innovation
opportunities in Asia and then – high-level ministerial or whirlwind trade
missions excepted – board flights for the US, Britain, Europe or Israel,
or indeed anywhere but Asia. Providing striking evidence of this
well-established and unfortunate tendency, the 2014 PricewaterhouseCoopers
report Leaving Us Behind noted that Australian firms have invested
more in tiny New Zealand than in all of the ASEAN nations combined.
In this context, it is
disappointing, if not especially surprising, that no direct linkages have been
made between the innovation push and Chinese, Indian, Indonesian, Japanese,
Korean, Vietnamese and other significant Asian cultural sub-groups within
Australian multicultural society. In fact, there is great opportunity
here, because these sub-groups are naturally networked right across Asia and
leveraging their wealth, their connections and business acumen in the context
of research and innovation directions, commercialisation, distribution,
marketing and sales of new goods and services is an obvious strategy,
especially given that it is in these general areas that Australian innovation
initiatives have so often been found wanting.
Illustrating the scale of this
potential, there are about 40 million overseas Chinese (people of Chinese
birth or descent but resident in other countries) scattered across many different
nations around the globe (New World Encyclopedia). In our region, the
overseas Chinese have been tagged the "Jews of Asia" because,
despite their immigrant origins, they dominate south-east Asia's
economies, business sectors and stock markets. Overseas Chinese, not only
from south-east Asia but from around the world, have invested and
continue to invest many billions of dollars directly into China, often into
their ancestral regions, cities and towns, where they have deep linguistic,
cultural, clan and familial connections.
According to 2011 Australian
Bureau of Statistics census data, Australia hosts about 866,000 people of
Chinese descent and this number will be considerably larger when the
results of the 2016 census are known. The potential for building
connections and business investment, and marketing, distribution and sales of
Australian innovative goods and services into expanding Asian and Chinese
markets is obvious.
With the objective of identifying
and accessing business opportunities in the world's fastest-growing economies,
Australian universities, other relevant public institutions and private-sector
innovation and research hubs should conscientiously explore and promote links
with significant Asian-Australian ethnic communities, especially Chinese
communities. The universities, in particular, have the public profile and
resources to successfully undertake this task on behalf of the
nation. More generally, innovators and researchers need to step outside a
mindset defined by the idea of selling goods and services to Asia, towards a
mindset that acknowledges the value of reaching out to Asian ethnic communities
and leveraging their cultural and linguistic heritage, market knowledge,
networks and business expertise, thereby maximising the commercial development
and export potential of Australian innovation.
Dr Richard Grainger is a former head of Curtin
University School of Management. His academic training was in Asian
studies, marketing and international management and he has travelled, lived and
worked throughout Asia.
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