GROWTH STRATEGIES IN THE EU AND JAPAN Seminar, EU2020 Strategy and the Innovation Union Initiative Synergies with Japan

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GROWTH STRATEGIES IN THE EU AND JAPAN Seminar, 3.03.2011 EU2020 Strategy and the Innovation Union Initiative Synergies with Japan Dr. Silviu Jora, European Commission, DG ENTR, D1

INNOVATION! «The Europe I believe in» By 2015, I want Europe to have become not just a "knowledge society", but an "innovation society Jose Manuel Barroso, European Parliament, 13 October 2009 2

Europe 2020: 7 flagship initiatives Smart Growth Innovation «Innovation Union» Education «Youth on the move» Digital society «A digital agenda for Europe» Sustainable Growth Climate, energy and mobility «Resource efficient Europe» Competitiveness «An industrial policy for the globalisation era» Inclusive Growth Employment and skills «An agenda for new skills and jobs» Fighting poverty «European platform against poverty»

Japan s New Growth Strategy - Convergences with EU 2020?- GREEN INNOVATION - LIFE INNOVATION Science,Technology,IT - Employment and Human Resources The Strategy is based on Japan s strengths and comparative advantages, focusing on three main potential sources of growth: the environment, health and tourism. It provides a clear and ambitious vision for the future by capitalizing on Japan s exceptional strengths, notably a high level of investment in human capital and R&D and outstanding educational results. Important place given to science, technology and innovation as a platform to support growth.

Overall innovation performances are diverse 0.700 0.600 0.500 0.400 0.300 0.200 0.100 0.000 B G LV RO LT P L HU SK M T IT GR ES P T CZ SI EU CY EE NL FR IE B E LU A T DK UK DE FI SE European Innovation Scoreboard 2009 Innovation leaders: Sweden, Finland, Germany, UK, Denmark Innovation followers: Austria, Luxembourg, Belgium, Ireland, France, Netherlands, Estonia, Cyprus Moderate innovators: Slovenia, Czech Republic, Portugal, Spain, Greece, Italy, Malta, Slovakia, Hungary, Poland, Lithuania Catching up countries: Romania, Latvia, Bulgaria 5

EU innovation support: Better access to finance Financing Loans & Guarantees: Risk-Sharing Finance facility (FP7 & EIB) for research projects SME guarantee facility (CIP-EIP) JEREMIE and other financial instruments of the Structural Funds Venture Capital: High growth and innovative SME facility (CIP-EIP) JEREMIE and other financial instruments of the Structural Funds Grants for projects: Market replication projects for proof of economic concept and investment readiness (CIP: eco-innovation, intelligent energy, ICT) Pilot & demonstration projects for proof of technological concept (CIP, FP7) Capacity building for research, innovation / technology transfer, public services for innovation (SF, IDABC, CIP, FP7, TENs) Structural Funds: Managing Authorities! Links: http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/policies/finance/guide-to-funding/index_en.htm ; http://www.eif.europa.eu ; http://ec.europa.eu/regional_policy/atlas2007/index_en.htm Practical guide: http://cordis.europa.eu/eu-funding-guide/home_en.html 6

EU innovation support: facilitate market take-up of innovations Demand Public procurement Promotion of and guidance on public procurement of innovative goods and services and pre-commercial public procurement Public procurement networks for mutual learning and cooperation (CIP) Regulation Internal Market rules for environmental, health & safety, etc. issues EU Public procurement rules Standardisation, labelling Policy coordination Lead Market Initiative: Coordination between policy areas and instruments Facilitate global market access WTO, bilateral agreements Links: http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/policies/innovation/policy/lead-marketinitiative/index_en.htm http://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/policies/innovation/policy/publicprocurement/index_en.htm http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/tl/research/priv_invest/pcp/index_en.htm 7

Complexity of EU innovation programme governance LLP Education & Training 6,2 Bn EIT 309M FP7 Research and Development 54 Bn CIP Competitveness & Innovation 3,6 Bn LIFE+ 2,1 Bn Structural Funds 347 Bn Comenius (preschool, comp. and Upper Sec) Leonardo da Vinci (vocational edu. & training) Erasmus (university level scholarships ) ErasmusMundus (third country) Grundtvig (adult education) E Twinning : ICT in schools Transversal Act. Ideas: Fundamental research (ERC) 7,5 Bn People: Marie-Curie- Scholarships (4,7 Bn) JRC (Joint Research Centres) 1,75 Bn Capacities: 4,1 Bn Regions of Knowledge (126 M) Dev Research policy (CREST, ERA-Watch, OMC- Nets) (70 M) SME research (1,3 Bn) Research potential of cohesion regions (340M) Science & Society. (280 M) Infrastructure (1,7 Bn) incl Risk sharing finance facility (RSFF) Cooperation: 32,4 Bn Themes: Energy (2,3 Bn); Environment (1,9 Bn); Space (1,4 Bn); Social & Econ.Sciences (0,6 Bn) ICT (9 Bn); etc Formats: JTI (incl Risk sharing finance facility RSFF) Art 169: cooperation of nat. Programmes ERA-Nets (plus) etc Enterprise & Innovation (EIP) 2,1 Bn Financial instruments (1,1 Bn) Service networks: SME consultancy, Technologytransfer, FP7 participation, IPR use and awareness Networking of actors: policy development and learning Analysis and studies e-business Eco-innovation (430 M): market replication; Financial instruments, Networking Etc. Intelligent Energy Europe (IEE) 727 M (Energy efficiency; market up-take; awareness raising) ICT 728 M (market up-take ICT; e-learning; ICT application) Environment: policy monitoring & policy development; NGO projects ERDF, ESF, Cohesion Fund Objectives: Convergence (251 Bn) Competitiveness & employment (49,1 Bn; ERDF, ESF) Territorial cooperation (successor to INTERREG) (7,75 Bn) Priorities: Research, Innovation, Environment New Instruments: JEREMIE (SME financial instrument) JESSICA urban dev. JASPERS technical assistance + EAFRD & EFF Committees 3 Committees 5 Committees Committee Committee Committee 10 Committees LIFE+ Managing Authorities (Member States & Regions Agencies Member States / COM work programme work programme work programme FP7 Agency (People, SME) ERC (Ideas) COM (RTD, ENTR, TREN, INFSO) EIB/EIF: CIP financial instruments, FP7: RSFF COM (ENTR, ENV) CIP Agency IEE, IRC/EIC COM (INFSO) Implementation: projects, networks, award of grants and subsidies, etc. Operational Programmes LIFE work programme Regions / MS / Agencies Bodies for territorial cooperation 8 EIF: JEREMIE

Main innovation bottlenecks No single market for innovation Underfunded and un-coordinated public support for innovation Under-developed capital markets for innovation: a quarter of the US Few SMEs benefit from innovation support programmes 9

What is Innovation Union? Tackling weaknesses Under-investment Fragmentation Framework conditions Strategic approach Partnership with Member States From idea to market Distinctive European approach? Focus on societal challenges Broad concept of innovation

Strengthening the knowledge base Actions 1. National strategies to boost training and careers of researchers (2011) 2. Independent multidimensional university ranking system and launch of businesseducation «knowledge alliances» (2011) 3. Commission to promote e-skills for innovation (2011) 4. Commission to propose a European Research Area framework (2012) to remove obstacles to mobility and cross-border cooperation by 2014 5. EU and Member States to complete or launch 60% of priority European research infrastructures by 2015. 6. Focus future EU R&I programmes on EU2020 and Innovation Union: societal challenges, with streamlining/ simplification (2014) 7. Ensure strong involvement of SMEs with high growth potential (2014) 8. Develop the Joint Research Centre s role to support the science base for policy making through forward-looking activities 9. European Institute of Innovation & Technology to set out a strategic innovation agenda (2011)

Access to finance Actions 10. New generation of Financial instruments with EIB (by 2014) 11. Regime for cross border Venture Capital funds (2012) 12. Stronger brokerage between innovative SMEs and investors 13. Review State Aid framework, to enable support to all forms of innovation (2011)

A Single Innovation Market Actions 14. Rapid agreement on EU patent 15. Screen regulatory frameworks linked to Partnerships (2011) 16. Reform EU standard setting & link to R&D projects (2011) 17. Member States to set aside procurement budgets for innovation, with EC technical/ financial support (2011) 18. Commission to present an eco-innovation action plan (20110

European Innovation Partnerships Frameworks bringing together main actors and actions around common objectives (selected societal challenges) 2010: Pilot on active and healthy ageing 2011: smart cities, water,raw materials

International cooperation Actions - 30. Attract high skilled third country nationals ( Japan?) - 31. Joint EU / national priorities for cooperation with third countries (2012) - 32. Agree international infrastructures with world partners (2012)

Innovation & Internationalisation - Innovation and Internationalisation breed from the same drivers and mutually support each other. - Globalisation requires internationalisation - Internationalisation is the road to competitiveness

Innovation and internationalisation are complementary Conclusions of an INNO-Grips Study 2010 - Innovative companies are more likely to export. They are more productive and therefore internationally more competitive. Exporting activities trigger learning effects and access to larger markets increases the turnover of exporting firms so more resources can be devoted to innovation and R&D investments. Policies supporting innovation and internationalisation should be linked up.

Remove barriers to innovation to promote internationalisation Innovation-Internationalisation are interdependent therefore the barriers to innovation act as barriers to internationalisation as well. - Knowledge barriers: Small firms and firms that are not part of a larger corporate group are more likely to experience knowledge barriers. - Financial barriers: are particularly important for SMEs producing very novel products and technologies or relying on advanced knowledge - Skill constraints: Small, young, innovative and growth oriented firms are more heavily affected by skill constraints

A considerable number of European SMEs are engaged in international activities yet only a small percentage is involved in internationalisation beyond the Internal Market. - 25% of SMEs within the EU27 export, of which about 50% also go beyond the Internal Market (13%). At the EU level the importance of the link between innovation and internationalisation has not been consistently approached until recently. At both the member state and the EU level there is a considerable dispersion of policy measures addressing either innovation or internationalisation or both. The level of awareness of public support programmes for innovation and internationalisation among SMEs is rather low and only 16 % actually use them. The Enterprise Europe Network (EEN) is one of the few instruments at the EU level linking up innovation and internationalisation policies.

DG ENTR and internationalisation Support initiatives: 1. Small Business Act (2008) 2. Enterprise Europe Network (2008) 3. Others: - Services Directive - Support programmes (AsiaInvest, ALInvest, Gateway to Japan...) - CIP and FP7 funds

EEN - 572 partner organisations in 45 countries

EEN in Asia The Enterprise Europe Network has opened 15 contact points in China and South Korea, giving European SMEs easier access to these attractive markets. There are now 10 partner organisations in China, in cities including Guangzhou, Xiamen and Hangzhou, and five in South Korea, including centres in Seoul and research hub Daejeon. Japan? 1 contact point opened in 2011

EU-Japan Cooperation on SMEs innovation and internationalisation - Building on the experience of more than 20 years of EU-Japan business dialogue, the Executive Training programme, EU-Japan Gateway - High expectations for the Enterprise Europe Network Japan Hosted by EU Japan Centre for International Cooperation

EU-Japan Science Diplomacy - S&T Agreement signed on 30 November 2009 (after years of negotiation) - The EU has been working together with Japanese ministries to make common coordinated calls for proposals and co-funding available in several research areas. - Japanese participation in FP 7 is still reduced considering the actual potential - Although in principle the Japanese entities are not eligible for funding which resulted in reduced interest for FP 7 participation, the 2011 FP7 Call for Proposals lists some highly technical areas for which funding is possible for the Japanese entities (as their contribution is considered indispensable): Aeronautics, Photovoltaics, Space, Superconductivity and Environment - J-BILAT project (dissemination and awareness on FP7, building partnerships)

The Potential of Kobe University Brussels Office - Japan and Kobe University commitment towards internationalisation An Office in Brussels means connecting with the ERA an education and research Single Market of 27 countries Reinforced student exchanges - EU Research Programmes participation more focus on science and technology needed - topics like: biotechnology and technologies for medical care are very welcome. - Building up expertise on EU funding mechanisms and project management would be necessary at the level of Kobe University stronger role for EUIJ, Kansai the agenda should include some EU project management training courses - A strengthening of EU related courses at Kobe University would be also expected a dedicated cross disciplinary EU specialisation programme would be a feasible target. - A pragmatic approach towards EU studies is necessary (curricula on project management, EU competition law, company law, IPR standards and regulations, lobbying strategies ) pragmatic career perspectives