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Israel’s Achievements on Innovation - Lessons for India

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August 02, 2019

What is the issue?

  • The Global Innovation Index-2019 (GII 2019) was released recently, with India being ranked 52.
  • In this context, here is how Israel converted its challenges into competitive advantages, exhibiting its intellectual prowess.

What are the highlights of GII 2019?

  • The GII rankings are published every year by Cornell University, INSEAD and the UN World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and GII Knowledge Partners.
  • This is the 12th edition of the GII rankings of 129 economies based on 80 indicators.
  • These range from intellectual property filing rates to mobile-application creation, education spending, and scientific and technical publications.
  • Switzerland remains number one in the GII index followed by Sweden, USA, Netherlands, UK, Finland, Denmark, Singapore, Germany and Israel.

How is India’s performance?

  • India, many believed, would break into the top 50 league for the first time. It came close, and ranked 52.
  • Nevertheless, India’s performance was commended as it topped the Central and South Asian region for the 9th consecutive year.
  • Also, India’s improvement from 81st rank in 2015 to 52nd in 2019 is the fastest by any major economy.
  • Significantly, India also continues to outperform on innovation relative to its gross domestic product (GDP).

Why is Israel’s performance significant?

  • The biggest news from the 2019 rankings was Israel breaking into the top 10 list.
  • This is the first by any country from the Northern Africa and West Asia region.

What are the challenges before Israel?

  • With a population of just 8.5 million, Israel has a very small domestic market.
  • Israel’s enterprises cannot look at broadening its market by exporting to neighboring countries as Israel is surrounded by enemies.
  • It is also endowed with very little natural resources including water.
  • Its 22,000 square kilometre area is predominantly arid, fit to grow almost nothing.

How were these dealt with?

  • Any other country with such adversity would have given up and become dependent on allies for survival, but Israel did not.
  • Economy - Israel’s policy-makers decided early to invest in human intellectual capital and create a knowledge-based economy.
  • By doing so, they hoped that Israel could become home to technology-focused industries that do not depend on natural resources.
  • At the same time, the country could offer products that could be easily exported to meet the demand anywhere in the world.
  • Education - Israel believed that its intellectual prowess would solve many of the pressing challenges - water scarcity, agricultural development, national security.
  • Israel began by investing in a strong education system.
  • Currently, it spends 7% of its GDP on education. Over 45% of its adults complete tertiary education.
  • Its investment in R&D is the highest in the world (4.2% of its GDP) with a third of that going into universities.

How have these transformed into?

  • Israeli universities, today, top in patent applications in the US.
  • Over 250 global companies including the likes of Facebook, Google, Apple, HP and Microsoft have set up their R&D labs in Israel.
  • Israel also has one of the highest concentrations of Nobel laureates.
  • That apart, Israel has the largest number of hi-tech startups per capita than any other country in the world.
  • Tel Aviv houses the second largest startup eco-system after Silicon Valley.
  • Hi-tech exports accounts for 45% of the country’s overall exports.
  • The startups have indeed solved the country’s pressing problems.
  • E.g. due to their work in membrane technology, Israel has efficiently used desalination to transform itself from world’s driest country to one with surplus water
  • It has become a leader in desert agriculture due to drip irrigation and precision farming.

How were the security issues dealt with?

  • Israel faces security issues that come from being surrounded by enemies and constantly fighting terrorism.
  • To tackle this, it invested heavily in cutting-edge technologies.
  • Today, the Israeli military is a national incubator and a significant catalyst for innovation.
  • With compulsory recruitment, every youth, based on talent and aptitude, gets exposed to the latest technology that the military uses.
  • That apart, they are taught to work as a team and to solve problems in a structured and disciplined manner.
  • These qualities help them come out and build successful enterprises.
  • Check Point, the world’s largest cyber security company, is one such organisation. In fact, Israel controls as much as 10% of the global cyber security market.

How has culture contributed to this success?

  • Forced to run, hide and fight in the past, Jews are natural risk-takers, an essential quality to become an entrepreneur.
  • Faced with adversities, Israelis are never happy with status quo and constantly try to improve things.
  • This has given birth to a trait they call ‘chutzpah’. Failure is accepted in the society and a person is encouraged to try again.

What do these hold for India?

  • India too has its share of challenges when it comes to food, energy, water and national security.
  • India needs to enhance sustainability and take healthcare to every nook and corner of the country; all these at a low cost.
  • Like Israel, India needs to invest heavily in education and R&D.
  • India’s investment in R&D now is a meager 0.7% of GDP.
  • Also, very little of this goes to universities considering that a bulk of public R&D goes into space, energy and defence sectors.
  • The size of the economy and population is not the constraint here, but rather the intent.
  • Notably, China, another large economy, has managed to up its R&D investment from 1.3% in 2006 to 2.18% in 2018.
  • India’s innovation should be focused not just on getting products and services to people at an affordable cost.
  • Rather, it should be aimed for global leadership.
  • Solving India’s challenges will eventually open opportunities for Indian enterprises globally, as had happened with Israel.

 

Source: Business Line

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