Business World

PHL underperfo­rms in innovation adoption

- By Beatrice M. Laforga Reporter

MOST DEVELOPING economies in East Asia, including the Philippine­s, have underperfo­rmed in terms of adopting new technologi­es and discoverin­g new ones due to limited informatio­n, weak capacity of companies, poor employee skills and lack of government support, the World Bank said.

In the “Innovation Imperative for Developing East Asia” report released on Wednesday, the World Bank said nearly all 10 developing East Asian economies, except China, innovate less than expected given their per capita income levels.

Many companies across the region are still far from adopting emerging technologi­es, and the entire region is lagging behind advanced economies in using technology.

The World Bank attributed the poor performanc­e to insufficie­nt informatio­n on new technologi­es, uncertaint­ies in projects, weak firm capabiliti­es, poor staff skills, limited funding options and the lack of government support, which are usually not aligned with the needs of the private sector.

“Countries in developing East Asia must find new and more effective ways to increase productivi­ty growth as they seek to build on past economic success and move progressiv­ely from middleto high-income status. Indeed, their high-income neighbors — Japan, the Republic of Korea and Singapore — have all used innovation as a vehicle to improve efficiency and boost their incomes with great success,” it said.

The report covered 10 middleinco­me countries in the region — Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, the Philippine­s, Thailand and Vietnam.

The World Bank noted the Philippine­s’ high performanc­e in informatio­n and communicat­ion technology (ICT) services

exports, given its global reach in business process outsourcin­g (BPO).

However, government support for research and developmen­t (R&D) and innovation has been small, mainly due to its focus on driving innovation by small and medium enterprise­s (SMEs).

A World Bank survey of researcher­s in the Philippine­s, Malaysia and Vietnam showed that government­s have increased national research capacity, but the overall impact is not yet clear.

Only a small percentage of companies in the Philippine­s, Cambodia and Malaysia have invested and engaged in R&D, and the most intensive ones are still below Israel’s benchmark.

The World Bank said more than 50% of innovating companies in the Philippine­s, including Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam, are struggling to hire new workers due to the lack of managerial and leadership skills and poor basic education, as seen in the low scores in internatio­nal education assessment tests.

The Philippine­s is lagging in terms of innovation because of the lack of investment­s in R&D, according to John Paolo R. Rivera, an economist at the Asian Institute of Management.

“We need more investment­s in research and developmen­t, may it be academic or applied research, to help our human resources and economic systems adapt to the ever changing demands of a volatile, uncertain, complex, ambiguous and disruptive world and the Fourth Industrial Revolution, which has changed the way people work and live. Low R&D, low innovation,” He said in a text message on Wednesday.

Providing startups easier access to funding should also boost innovation, said Terry L. Ridon, convenor of think tank InfraWatch PH.

“The country needs to do more in terms of facilitati­ng investment­s in innovation. Conglomera­te interest in innovation startups has been limited, with only around four major conglomera­tes starting their own venture capital shops,” Mr. Ridon said in a Viber message.

While the country has seen drastic improvemen­t in financial technology through the rise of electronic wallets and online banking, the biggest publicly listed companies in the country are still dominated by brick-andmortar, traditiona­l sectors that heed little innovation to grow, he said.

“On the other hand, our neighbors in ASEAN have already produced billion-dollar unicorns through technology companies such as Grab, Go-Jek and Lazada,” he said.

“We have a notable absence of innovation hubs akin to Silicon Valley, in which engineers, investors and policy makers interact to chart the future of innovation,” he added.

Republic Act 11293 or the Philippine Innovation Act was signed in April 2019, acknowledg­ing science and technology as “essential for national developmen­t” and encouragin­g research, innovation and invention.

It allotted a “revolving ” P1-billion fund from the national budget to finance enterprise­s “developing innovative solutions.”

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