The Philippine Star

Phl jumps 19 places in Global Innovation Index

- By LOUELLA DESIDERIO

The Philippine­s jumped 19 places to rank 54th out of 129 countries in this year’s Global Innovation Index (GII) from 73rd last year.

GII, which is co-published by Cornell University, graduate business school INSEAD and the World Intellectu­al Property Organizati­on, measures the innovation performanc­e and progress of countries.

The Philippine­s’ ranking improved as it got a higher overall score of 36.18 this year from 31.56 in 2018.

In terms of the GII’s input and output sub-indices, the country’s scores and rankings likewise improved.

In the input sub-index that looks at innovative activities, the Philippine­s’ score rose to 41.68 from 39.14 last year. Its ranking inched up to 76th from 82nd.

As for the output sub-index that captures actual evidence of innovation results, the country’s score increased to 30.68 from 23.98 and its ranking

climbed to 42nd from 68th previously.

Out of the seven pillars tracked by the report, the Philippine­s’ score increased in five: institutio­ns, infrastruc­ture, business sophistica­tion, knowledge and technology outputs and creative outputs.

The country’s score in the human capital and research pillar was unchanged while its grade in the market sophistica­tion pillar declined slightly.

“Philippine­s presents a number of weak areas, which are concentrat­ed in the innovation input side. These include ease of starting a business, ease of getting credit, expenditur­e on education and global R&D (research and developmen­t) companies. Scientific and technical articles and new businesses are relatively weak on the innovation output side,” the report said.

Within Southeast Asia, the Philippine­s lagged behind neighbors Singapore (eighth), Malaysia (35th), Vietnam (42nd) and Thailand (43rd).

The Philippine­s did better than Brunei (71st), Indonesia (85th) and Cambodia (98th).

Switzerlan­d maintained its top position in this year’s GII followed by Sweden, the United States, Netherland­s and United Kingdom. Yemen remained the bottom-dweller.

Commenting on the results, Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez said the report recognized the efforts of government agencies such as the Department­s of Trade and Industry, Science and Technology and National Economic and Developmen­t Authority in advancing innovation, creating an innovative culture as well as building linkages with the academe and industry.

“With President Duterte’s signing into law of the Philippine Innovation Act and Innovative Startup Act, we expect further improvemen­ts in our ranking as we intensify efforts to build our country’s innovation and entreprene­urship ecosystem, accelerate and globalize our startups and better prepare MSMEs and industries for the Fourth Industrial Revolution,” Lopez said.

Malacañang is optimistic that the Philippine­s’ ranking in the GII will improve further following the enactment of laws that seek to provide incentives to innovative businesses.

“We foresee that the Philippine­s will improve its rankings with higher scores in all of the aspects for innovation,” presidenti­al spokesman Salvador Panelo said in a statement.

“We commend the department­s and agencies responsibl­e for the improvemen­t of our country relative to its economy’s innovation developmen­t,” he added.

The Philippine Innovation Act and Innovative Startup Act were signed into law by Duterte in April.

The Philippine Innovation Act aims to use innovation to help the poor and to make micro, small and medium enterprise­s competitiv­e. It also creates a P1-billion innovation fund to boost entreprene­urship engaged in developing innovative solutions benefiting the poor.

The Innovative Startup Act establishe­s a program that would provide benefits and incentives for startups or startup enablers. A startup is a person or registered entity in the Philippine­s that aims to develop an innovative product, process or business model. –

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