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Want innovation for the masses? Look to the mountains for answers

LSE academic鈥檚 book partly inspired by innovation economy divisions in his hometown of Oxford

Published on
February 23, 2024
Last updated
February 23, 2024
Source: Getty Images

Put Silicon Valley and Boston on the back burner. Pharmaceuticals hotbed Basel and the Austrian state of Styria with its high-tech steel and paper industries are among the models that policymakers should learn from to spread the benefits of innovation to the 鈥渕asses鈥, according to a professor鈥檚 new book, partly inspired by divisions in his hometown of Oxford.

, by Neil Lee, professor of economic geography at the London School of Economics 鈥 recently included by the聽Financial Times聽among its聽聽鈥 offers a message on how universities can help create good jobs for their regions.

The book emerged from his research on 鈥渓evelling up鈥 in the UK and 鈥渉ow you can use innovation to reduce spatial inequality鈥, Professor Lee told聽探花视频. It also responds to an argument made by some academics who study innovation that 鈥渋nequality is the price you have to pay to have a highly innovative economy鈥.

But, he said, that view relies on a聽Silicon Valley-focused view of innovation聽where 鈥渨e don鈥檛 look at the places that are also highly successful, where they do have these mechanisms which can make sure the gains from innovation are broadly shared鈥.

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The book consists of case studies of four nations 鈥 Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan and Austria 鈥 based on interviews with policymakers and business leaders, as well as data analysis.

One place Professor Lee visited was Leoben, deep in the southern Austrian state of Styria, a city traditionally focused on steel and mining, with its Montanuniversit盲t Leoben, a small technical university 鈥 a city that, he writes, 鈥渟hould be the archetype of industrial decline鈥, but is far from it.

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Part of the reason why, the book argues, 鈥渋s that between 1998 and 2016, Austria saw the largest increase in R&D intensity of any OECD economy bar South Korea鈥, with much of that growth occurring in industries such as steel, rather than tech.

Styria doesn鈥檛 come up with the stuff on your iPhone, but it does, Professor Lee explains, produce machines that remove bad grain from production using light sensors and puffs of pressurised air; it produces the world鈥檚 longest train rails, which save assembly costs; and it produces high-quality paper. All this makes the state 鈥渁 good example of the Austrian advances in normally low-innovation industries鈥.

Across all his case studies, Professor Lee saw locally focused universities of applied sciences 鈥 alongside strong vocational education and institutions that diffuse innovation into the average firm 鈥 as a key part of the equation. Such universities are 鈥渘ot necessarily [doing] world-leading blue-sky research鈥, he said, but do help make firms highly innovative via 鈥渕arginal incremental improvements by applying other existing technologies鈥o their own production processes鈥, with that local role for universities 鈥渙ften crucial in terms of creating good jobs鈥.

A key element, he argued, is in fostering innovation that creates not just high-skilled jobs, but medium-skilled jobs.

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Professor Lee, an economist at Lancaster University鈥檚 Work Foundation thinktank before becoming an academic, described his hometown of Oxford, where he still lives, as 鈥減art of the inspiration鈥 for the book. While he has friends in Oxford 鈥渨ho are star scientists and their lives are great鈥, soaring house prices and a 鈥渉ollowed out labour market鈥 around the university-driven innovation economy mean life is not so great for some of the people he went to school with.

He contrasted that with the Swiss city of Basel, a pharmaceuticals centre that, judged on patents per capita, is 鈥渢he most innovative place on earth鈥.

鈥淚n Basel, the problem is partly solved by the vocational education system. I talked to pharmaceutical firms and the first thing they would say is, 鈥榃e鈥檙e not just here because of the star scientists; we鈥檙e here because we have people who can run the tests and do good things in labs.鈥欌

Meanwhile, the city of Oxford, he said, 鈥済oes on about how innovative and how important it is in the world 鈥 but actually the benefits really don鈥檛 translate to the average person鈥.

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Professor Lee hoped the book鈥檚 message would reach policymakers in nations such as the UK, US or Canada 鈥 highlighting the relevance of Styria鈥檚 high-tech steel industry for a region like south Wales, afflicted by continuing job losses in steel 鈥 though he acknowledged that the Silicon Valley brand retains a powerful pull.

鈥淭he interesting challenge for a book like this is people say, 鈥榃ell it鈥檚 very hard to learn these policy lessons from somewhere like Switzerland,鈥欌 he said.

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鈥淚 would argue it鈥檚 equally hard, if not more so, to learn these policy lessons from somewhere like the Bay Area [tech sector] which developed 50 years ago.鈥

john.morgan@timeshighereducation.com

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