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CLOSING THE GAPS IN EDUCATION AND TECHNOLOGY William F. Maloney Office of the Chief Economist Latin America and Caribbean Region World Bank FOCAL- Conférence.

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Presentation on theme: "CLOSING THE GAPS IN EDUCATION AND TECHNOLOGY William F. Maloney Office of the Chief Economist Latin America and Caribbean Region World Bank FOCAL- Conférence."— Presentation transcript:

1 CLOSING THE GAPS IN EDUCATION AND TECHNOLOGY William F. Maloney Office of the Chief Economist Latin America and Caribbean Region World Bank FOCAL- Conférence de Montréal, May 03

2 50% of growth is due to Total Factor Productivity: technological progress Source: Calderon, Fajnzylber y Loayza (2002)

3 Why is LAC so behind in technological progress? Barriers to innovation – Protectionism reduced incentives to innovate or search global knowledge stock for ideas – High barriers to trade and FDI – Progress made over last two decades Low levels and quality of education Weak effort in innovation Disfunctional National System of Innovation (NIS) Weak on ingredients and and how they mix

4 Technological and Educational Gaps: LA vs. Asia and Scandinavia

5 Growth in Relative Demand:Tertiary vs. Secondary Education MexicoChile Chile: Estimated Relative Demand Mexico: Estimated Relative Demand

6 The Deficit in Years of Education

7 The Deficit in Secondary Enrollment

8 The Deficit in Tertiary Enrollment

9 Educational Quality Grade on PREAL –UNESCO Exam, 1997

10 Quality of education is poor too Mathematics score of secondary level students 2 nd best score in LAC

11 Terciary- Ok given level of GDP but... Fuente: Brunner 2001 Ph.D.s en Ciencia/millón hab. 1996-1997

12 Education Agenda Must raise level of secondary enrollment – Not just an issue of money, but institutions and incentives Must facilitate access to tertiary – Improve credit markets, financing Improve quality of education systems Link training programs to productive sector

13 Tech progress also requires active investment in innovation Active approach to trade, FDI – Asia- Reverse engineering, research consortia – NAFTA is not enough (see forthcoming NAFTA Study) Search and purchase of technology- licensing R & D – Learning where the frontier is – Apply in process of adoption /adaptation, Invention Countries need to learn how to learn!

14 LAC: Not among the Innovation (R & D) Superstars Fuented: Lederman y Maloney (2002) India Argentina China Costa Rica Israel Finland Korea Mexico Canada: average for income, below US, Finland, Sweden

15 Latin America Do NR offer fewer opportunities for innovation?

16 Advanced Countries: X- NR Canada- average for income- far below US, Finland, Sweden

17 Pattern is not due to low returns to investment in innovation Returns of 20-120% in US literature; higher in LDCs US should invest 2-4 times more; LAC should invest 2-10 times more Market failure: social return far higher than private Fuented: Lederman y Maloney (2002)

18 LAC ’ s efficiency of converting R & D into patents,TFP is also low Patents = B 1 I&D + B p country*R&D

19 Why does LAC lag in innovative effort and efficiency? Not addressing serious mkt failures in innovation – Few incentives to R & D - tax breaks, subsidies – Weak efforts to help firms learn Incubators, research parks, consortia Disfunctional NIS: – Knowledge networks: how a country learns and acquires its “ innovative capacity ” – Explains more dynamic NR sectors in Scandinavia. see From Natural Resources to the Knowledge Economy (2001) – No mkt forces assure elements of NIS work together

20 Human Capital University Think Tanks/ Antenna Firms Innovation & TFP Growth Other Public Policies: Rules of the Game Infrastructure (ICT) Subsidies/Tax incentives Coordination Initiatives Global Knowledge Economy National Innovation System Innovation Clusters Global Knowledge Economy

21 Most R & D $ and scientists in universities but collaboration with private sector is very low (interviews with entrepreneurs: score 1-7)  Finland 40% have formal arrangements with U  Chile 25% and not very fruitful (Melo 2001)  60% of $ dedicated to basic science; US 15%

22 Latin America ’ s Challenge for the next decades … Close huge secondary gaps and improve quality; access to tertiary – Credit, subsidies & information – Support to get over the secondary hump Encourage private R&D and training through further openness and deregulation, IPR and competitive subsidies for R&D Networks: University/firms linkages; sectoral innovation clusters; international connections Lubricants: labor market and financial sector reform

23 END


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