Systems Thinking, Market Failure, and the Development of Innovation Policy: The Case of Australia

Posted: 3 Nov 2011

See all articles by Mark Dodgson

Mark Dodgson

University of Queensland - Technology and Innovation Management Centre

Alan Hughes

University of Cambridge - Centre for Business Research (CBR)

John Foster

University of Queensland - School of Economics

J.S. Metcalfe

The University of Manchester - Centre for Research in Innovation and Competition (CRIC)

Date Written: November 3, 2011

Abstract

Innovation policy is increasingly informed from the perspective of a national innovation system (NIS), but, despite the fact that research findings emphasize the importance of national differences in the framing conditions for innovation, policy prescriptions tend to be uniform. Justifications for innovation policy generally relate to notions of market failure that are applicable in all nations in all conditions. In this paper we develop a broad framework for NIS analysis, involving free market, coordination and complex-evolutionary system approaches. Within this framework we explore the evolving relationship between market failure and systems approaches to innovation policy in the case of Australia. Drawing on information and analysis collected for a major review of Australia’s NIS, and the government’s 10-year plan in response to it, we show how the free market trajectory of policy-making of past decades is being extended, complemented and refocused by new approaches to complex-evolutionary system thinking. These approaches are shown to emphasize the importance of systemic connectivity, evolving institutions and organizational capabilities. Nonetheless, despite the fact that there has been much progress in this direction in the Australian debate, the predominant logic behind policy choices still remains one of addressing market failure, and the primary focus of policy attention continues to be science and research rather than demand-led approaches. We discuss how the development and elaboration of notions of systems failure, rather than just market failure, can further improve policy-making in the future.

Keywords: Innovation policy, National Innovation Systems, Market failure, Systems thinking, Complex-evolutionary perspectives, Australia

Suggested Citation

Dodgson, Mark and Hughes, Alan and Foster, John and Metcalfe, J.S., Systems Thinking, Market Failure, and the Development of Innovation Policy: The Case of Australia (November 3, 2011). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1953892

Mark Dodgson (Contact Author)

University of Queensland - Technology and Innovation Management Centre ( email )

Brisbane, QLD 4072
Australia

Alan Hughes

University of Cambridge - Centre for Business Research (CBR) ( email )

Top Floor, Judge Business School Building
Trumpington Street
Cambridge, CB2 1AG
United Kingdom
+44 1223 765335 (Phone)

John Foster

University of Queensland - School of Economics ( email )

Brisbane, QLD 4072
Australia
61 7 3365 6780 (Phone)
61 7 3365 7299 (Fax)

J.S. Metcalfe

The University of Manchester - Centre for Research in Innovation and Competition (CRIC) ( email )

Oxford Road
Manchester, M13 9QH
United Kingdom

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