R&D and The Challenges of Wealth Creation in Nigeria
R&D and The Challenges of Wealth Creation in Nigeria
R&D and The Challenges of Wealth Creation in Nigeria
1 © NACETEM 2010
NACETEM
Acknowledgments
The HMST
The PS
The DPPRA
Others
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PRESENTATION OUTLINE
Preamble
R&D: definition, types and categorisation
Wealth Creation
How and when is wealth created from R&D?
How is it done elsewhere/Nigeria?
Challenges of R&D in Nigeria
Recipe for R&D-based wealth creation in Nigeria
Concluding Remarks
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Preamble
In today’s increasingly knowledge-driven world, Science and
Technology (S&T) are the inseparable twin keys to progress and
industrial growth
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EVOLUTION OF R&D
R&D is a post Second World War phenomenon, and absorbs a
sizeable proportion of corporate and public funds in the developed
countries
R&D definition
R&D refers to creative work
undertaken on a systematic basis
in order to increase the stock of
knowledge, including knowledge of
man, culture and society, and the
use of this stock of knowledge to
devise new applications
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CATEGORIES OF RESEARCH
CHARACTERISTICS
Specific Systematic
Experimental work based
Application
NATURE &theoretical on existing
conceived knowledge
New
processes,
TARGET systems
& services
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WHY R&D?
Countries that have heavily invested in R&D
have reaped substantial economic benefits...
South China India South Nigeria
Korea Africa
Population in millions (2007 est.) 48.0 1329.1 1164.7 49.2 147.7
R&D Expenditure as % GDP (2000-
2005) 2.6 1.4 0.8 0.8 0.20*
Researchers in R&D per million
people (1990-2005) 3187 708 119 307 125.9*
Royalties and Licence Fees in
USD per person (2005) 38.2 0.1 - 0.9 ?
Patents to residents per million
people (2000-2005) 1113 16 1 - ?
Source: Human Development Report, 2007 /2008/2009
* - NACETEM /NEPAD STI Indicator Survey
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WHY R&D?
Developing nations can no longer compete based only on
their natural resource endowments and locational
advantages.
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Model B
Model C
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WEALTH CREATION
Wealth is the abundance of
valuable resources or
material possessions or the
control of such assets
DEVELOPING ECONOMIES
EMERGING ECONOMIES
DEVELOPED ECONOMIES
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NATIONAL WEALTH: WHERE WE ARE
IP Self Exploitation
(Incubators,
Science Park)
R&D
(Inventions, Outright Sale
COPYRIGHTS
Universities Innovations)
and Licensing
Research
Institutes OTHERS
Talents &
Creativity
Incubation
(Spin Offs)
DIRECT
COMMERCIALI-
ZATION Spin Outs
Existing Firms
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THE SPIN-OUT OPTION: THE CASE
OF MIT & CHALMERS
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The Incubation Option: The Case of MIT
“If the companies founded by MIT graduates and faculty formed
an independent nation, the revenues produced by the companies
would make that nation the 24th largest economy in the world.
The 4,000 MIT-related companies employ 1.1 million people and
have annual world sales of $232 billion during 1994. That is
roughly equal to a gross domestic product of $116 billion, which
is a little less than the GDP of South Africa and more than the
GDP of Thailand.” (MIT - The Impact of Innovation,1997)
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Resources Deficiency
Resources available for R&D are too thin and are
spread on numerous researches running
concurrently.
For instance, in OAU, records show that grants were
allocated to about 46 research projects between 1998
and 2002, and 87 research projects between 2003 and
the first quarter of 2007. Unfortunately, most of the
projects are either surveys, impact analyses,
appraisals, evaluation studies or analytical studies,
while only about 1% is innovative and/or
interdisciplinary (Akinsola, 2007)
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QUALITY: GLOBAL COMPETITIVENESS RATINGS
Global Country Research Quality of Available
Competitiveness Training Scientific Scientist &
Ranking Institutions Engineers
3 Singapore 5.5 5.6 5.2
19 South Korea 4.6 5 4.9
24 Malaysia 4.9 4.7 4.7
29 China 4.4 4.4 4.6
30 Chile 4.6 3.9 4.9
45 South Africa 4.6 4.7 3.1
49 India 4.7 4.9 5.6
56 Brazil 4.8 4.2 4.2
99 Nigeria 3.9 2.9 4.5
114 Ghana 3.4 3.7 3.6
Average 4.5
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SOURCE: Global Competitiveness Ranking 2009
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QUALITY: WORLD RANKING OF UNIVERSITIES, 2010
6 Nigerian universities (4 in 2007) ranked among top 100 in Africa!
AFRICAN RANK UNIVERSITY COUNTRY WORLD RANK
1 UNIVERSITY OF CAPE TOWN SA 340
2 STELLENBOSCH UNIVERSITY SA 538
3 UNIVERSITY OF PRETORIA SA 539
4 UNIVERSITY OF THE WITWATERSRAND SA 808
5 UNIVERSITY OF KWAZULU NATAL SA 904
6 RHODES UNIVERSITY SA 1,024
7 UNIVERSITY OF THE WESTERN CAPE SA 1124
8 UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH AFRICA SA 1219
9 UNIVERSITY OF JOHANNESBURG SA 1422
10 UNIVERSITY OF CAPE TOWN SA 340
61 (44)* OBAFEMI AWOLOWO UNIVERSITY NGA 5756 (5834)*
66 UNIVERSITY OF JOS NGA 5882
68 (96)* UNIVERSITY OF LAGOS NGA 5936 (7601)*
77 (79)* UNIVERSITY OF BENIN NGA 6324 (7318)*
79 (65)* UNIVERSITY OF IBADAN NGA 6425 (6809)*
99 UNIVERSITY OF NIGERIA, NSUKKA NGA 7170
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* (2007 RANKING) SOURCE: http://www.webometrics.info/top100_continent.asp?cont=africa; 2010
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R&D Productivity in Nigeria (2004 -2008): Publications*
Output Total Per Per Per Capita
Capita Annum per annum
Articles in Local Journals 1093 3.99 218.60 0.80
Local Conference Papers 882 3.22 176.40 0.64
Articles in Foreign Journals 862 3.15 172.40 0.63
International Conference Papers 313 1.14 62.60 0.23
Books/Chapter in books 216 0.79 43.20 0.16
Total 3366 12.28 673.20 2.46
•NIPRISAN /NICOSAN
Patented by Nigerian
Institute of Pharmaceutical
Research & Development,
Abuja. U.S. Patent
#5,800,819 - September 1,
1998.
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Ranking of Barriers to Tangible R&D
Limitation % researchers
Lack of funding for research 87
Inadequate supply of electricity 82
Lack of R&D facilities 76
Obsolete facilities 67
Lack of exposure to modern lab skills 55
Inadequate water supply 54
Lack of quality research assistance 50
Inadequate access to recent journals/library materials 45
Lack of exposure to conferences 43
Inadequate time for R&D 29
Poor attitude to collaboration among researchers 29
Lack of research drive 24
* Based on a sample of researchers in 10 leading universities
27 in Nigeria Source: NACETEM, 2009a © NACETEM 2010
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Characteristics of R&D Collaboration in Nigeria
Stakeholders % of Researchers
Local Research Agency 40.8
Industry 29.2
International Research Agency 17.5
University within Nigeria 6.8
University outside Nigeria 4.9
Local Financial Institutions 2.7
World Bank 2.3
NGOs 2.3
State Government 1.5
45
40
35
% researchers
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Sponsorship Travel S&T grants Provision of Staff Others
of W/shop fellowship R&D Exchange
and facilities Programmes
Conferences
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
% of innovative firms
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THE NIS: What is it?
The NIS is
“the network of institutions in the public and private sectors whose
activities and interactions initiate, import, modify and diffuse new
technologies.” (Freeman, 1987)
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Structure of Interactions among elements of the NIS
Finance
Policy
Instruments
Government
Policy
Instruments
Policy
Policy
Instruments
Instruments
Brokerage, Interface,
Brokerage,
Bridging Institutions
Interface,
Education Bridging Industrial
Institutions
and
Research Production
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Adapted from Tiffin,1997
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R&D AND THE NIS: VISION 7-POINT
AGENDA
20-2020
WHEN AND HOW NEEDS
MDGs
CAN WEALTH BE
CREATED?
Developmental goals are S&T
much more easily achieved
when S&T knowledge is
created and deployed
within the context of the
NIS
GLOBAL, REGIONAL, NATIONAL &
GRASSROOTS DEVELOPMENT
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Individual Re-orientation
Changes in
Mindset
Ideology
Orientation
Value system
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Institutional Re-arrangement
SWOT Assessment
R&D agenda
Collaborative/Interdisciplinary/Market-focused R&D
Harness Resources
Central Labs (for example OAU CSL)
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Affiliation of Researchers using OAU CSL
Affiliation %
Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife 50.0
University of Ibadan 9.1
LAUTECH, Ogbomoso 9.1
Bayero University, Kano 4.5
FUT, Owerri 9.1
University of Ilorin 9.1
University of Agriculture, Makurdi 4.5
National Institute for Fresh Water Fisheries Research, Maiduguri 4.5
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NACETEM Intra-African Research
cooperation with other
African Scientists
Prof P. Rasoanivo
Cape town
Dr. G. Matsabisa
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Functional Government-
University/Research Institutes-Industry
Linkage through Networking: the GIKI
model
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TTO
GIKI MODEL
Model for Automating
Interactions
among
Government,
Industry &
Knowledge Knowledge Management Platform (KMP)
Institutions
IPTTO
Government IP Assets
Industry
•Economic Development (SME
Policies, market creation •Research Funds
•National IP Infrastructure •Research Collaborations
•Enforcement
•Licensing
•IP Strategy
•Marketing
•R&D Enhancement
•IP Education
•Commercialization of R&D
Technology
Transfer OPEN
Model MARKET
SCIENCE
PARK
TECHNOLOGY
INCUBATOR
R&D
IDEA/PROBLEM
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CONCLUDING REMARKS
R&D activities need to be properly managed at all
levels before they can lead to wealth
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THANK YOU
FOR YOUR
ATTENTION
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