º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Opinion

The Covid-19 crisis might well catalyse innovation in many traditional sectors - Dylan Jones-Evans

While digital and health economies have prospered during the pandemic sectors such tourism and education will need to evolve

Last week, the latest edition of the Global Innovation Index (GII) was published, a report that is not only an annual assessment of innovation trends but also examines the individual performance of 131 economies around the world.

According to the index, the three most innovative nations in the world are Switzerland, Sweden and the United States, with the United Kingdom ranking fourth, an increase of one since last year.

Interestingly, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ ranks first in the world for the quality of scientific publications and second in the quality of its universities.

More broadly, the report makes a number of notable findings. Whilst innovation is concentrated at the level of science and technology clusters in a small number of high-income economies (with Cambridge and Oxford identified as the leading locations), the innovation performance in many developing economies has also been impressive despite various challenges such as the decline in the funding of innovation.

In fact, there continues to be a shift in the global innovation landscape with countries such as China, Vietnam, India and the Philippines continuing their rise in the innovation rankings over the past few years.

More importantly, the most innovative economies have a balance between the science and the market i.e. they emphasis knowledge creation and exploration whilst investing in the application and exploitation of science and technology.

Of course, the burning question is how Covid-19 has impacted innovation and what will happen as economies recover especially as previous GII reports had been showing that innovation has been flourishing across the World.