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Spreading smart ideas: Policy priorities to accelerate the spread of innovations

PLEASE NOTE: THE VENUE FOR THIS EVENT HAS CHANGED.
Crawford School of Public Policy | HC Coombs Policy Forum

Event details

Public Lecture

Date & time

Tuesday 12 November 2013
6.00pm–7.15pm

Venue

Coombs Lecture Theatre, HC Coombs Building 9, Cnr Fellows Road and Garran Road, ANU

Speaker

Dr Mark Matthews, Executive Director, HC Coombs Policy Forum, Crawford School of Public Policy; Dr Jim Minifie, Productivity Growth Program Director, Grattan Institute; Brad Krauskopf, CEO, Hub Australia and Australia’s Small Business Ambassador for 2013; Iarla Flynn, Head of Public Policy, Google Australia

Contacts

Joshua Wrest
6125 1925

Innovation is about much more than taking Australian inventions to market. Australia needs to capture opportunities in the global innovation system, and adopt and adapt innovations from elsewhere.

What are these opportunities? How well is Australia exploiting them at present? What should policymakers do differently to assist in these endeavours?

Join us at this forum to hear the panel explore the policy challenges in exploiting today’s commercially relevant technologies.

Panellists:

Dr Mark Matthews Executive Director, HC Coombs Policy Forum, Crawford School of Public Policy, ANU

Dr Jim Minifie Productivity Growth Program Director, Grattan Institute

Brad Krauskopf CEO, Hub Australia and Australia’s Small Business Ambassador for 2013

Iarla Flynn Head of Public Policy, Google Australia

This panel discussion will explore how the adoption and adaptation of global innovations can strengthen the Australian economy:

• How do smart ideas spread?
• What drives competitive advantage in global value chains?
• Should small countries dispense with domestic R&D, and shift to acquiring and adapting the best technologies emerging internationally?
• How are Australian firms – large and small – positioned to participate?
• What are today’s smart ideas?
• What are today’s leading edge commercially relevant technologies?
• Are these technologies big enough to matter, or are we entering a great stagnation?
• Do today’s ‘smart ideas’ spread in a different way to past technologies?
• What policies will speed the spread of today’s smart ideas?
• What can Australian policymakers learn from elsewhere?
This public forum is held in partnership with the Grattan Institute.

Updated:  19 April 2024/Responsible Officer:  Crawford Engagement/Page Contact:  CAP Web Team