When we started working on this critical review of Australia as an innovation nation in early 2019, we had no clue that the most disruptive year in living memory was just around the corner. No one did.
When the pandemic hit we pivoted, like many Australian businesses. We now see this review as an examination of what Australia can achieve in this critical moment in its history. Will we see the same declines in productivity, wage growth and inflation? Or will our future embrace our strengths, correct our weaknesses, and bring the considered changes in policy and culture that are necessary to usher in an era of prosperity?
Will our future take us beyond our reliance on fossil fuel resources that are increasingly diminishing in value? Will it fulfil our citizens' potential to continue to achieve great things? Will Australia be an innovation leader or laggard?
This book contains essays and overviews by nearly 100 distinguished Australians: academics, politicians, entrepreneurs, researchers, and leaders of our scientific and economic communities. They share their perspectives on Australia’s challenges, and the boundless opportunities before us.
We believe it provides a fresh counterpoint to the more formal studies on innovation commissioned by various governments in the past two decades, three of which we review within.
This section is structured in nine chapters.
The first, "Culture change", examines Australia’s business culture broadly. It examines how well our businesses embrace risk. What emphasis is there on innovation at the enterprise level? How does Australia see itself?
Professor Mark Dodgson is an internationally renowned innovation scholar. “Too many boards of directors are sclerotic, compliance-orientated, risk-averse, and unaware of the nature and importance of innovation,” he writes. “Too many firms, large and small, lack the management skills to use innovation to survive and thrive in a highly competitive and increasingly challenging world.”
The second chapter, "Funding our future", looks at how we can best target funds to spur innovation, and creatively deploy finance to improve outcomes. Phil Ruthven, of IBISWorld, gives a broad economic examination of where opportunity lies. Labor’s Clare O’Neil calls for government to be a major buyer of Australian innovation, and to support home-grown goods and services as they can successfully scale up to target global markets. Dean Foley of Indigenous entrepreneurial group Barayamal examines the venture capital gap between Indigenous-owned businesses and others, and the loss of potential that causes.
Chapter two also includes a section on ethical investing, and how it is transforming the finance sector and the economy more broadly. These principles need to be taken up on a wider scale if we are to pick investments based on sustainable long-term benefits, to the benefit of both investors and the nation. This is social-financial innovation at its best, and Australia is a per capita global leader.
Chapter three, "Smarter cities", examines what we want Australia’s cities to look like. This applies both to our large metropolises and our important regional centres. What we build, and how we build it, has the potential to limit individuals and enterprises or to push them forward. Much of Australia’s future success will depend on the diffusion of innovation, and how well our cities nourish the potential of the people within them.
Caroline McMillen celebrates the success of Newcastle, which has bounced back following the decline of its steelmaking industry. Andrew Barr, Chief Minister of the ACT, writes on the achievements of the world’s most successful planned city, Canberra. Reggie Cabal, CEO of Orix, examines technology parks and their role in fostering innovation. Dr Chris Jones, of the Australian Electric Vehicle Association, makes a strong argument that Australia is behind the pack in terms of infrastructure needed for the inevitable shift away from fossil-fuel vehicles.
Chapter four, "Revitalising manufacturing", looks at Australia’s future as a manufacturing nation. Professors Roy Green and Veena Sahajwalla, and industry heavyweights David Chuter, Jeff Lang, and Brooke Donnelly, all note that we are yet to reach our potential. They believe that Australia can and should market itself more vigorously on the world stage as a centre for highly advanced manufacturing powered by renewable energy, with sustainable models for materials throughout the production process.
Chapter five, "A brighter spark in a changing climate", looks at Australia’s natural resources – water, agriculture, and energy – to examine how they will need to adapt in a world already affected by global warming. Frank Jotzo, an energy economist at the Australian National University, writes that “the future spells a declining trajectory for fossil fuels. Australia’s coal exports, and later its gas exports, are set to fall."
“Luckily for Australia," Jotzo continues "the continent is endowed not only with abundant fossil fuels but with a practically unlimited potential to produce cheap, renewable energy, if we make the right investments and policy changes today.”
Other writers in the chapter show how the benefits of tomorrow will only be won with investments and policy guidance today. The Millennium Drought gave Australia’s water industry experts practice in how we can apply innovation to deal with the changes to come.
Chapter six, "Knowledge is power", takes a look at how we can improve education, from preschool to high school, tertiary, and post-graduate levels. It is within classrooms, and beyond them, that we will build the workforce of the future. Education will equip all Australians with the confidence, skills, and science literacy necessary for an innovative nation to thrive.
Chapter seven, "Respect the science", features some of Australia’s leading scientific minds across astronomy, medical research, and applied science in the form of commercialisation. This includes Chief Scientist Dr Cathy Foley; CSIRO head Dr Larry Marshall, and the 2020 winner of the Prime Minister’s Innovation Prize, Professor Thomas Maschmeyer.
These leaders are at the coalface of how science impacts our lives. They should be celebrated, and listened to, as much as our sporting stars.
Chapter eight, Recalibrating for the Industries of the Future, looks at quantum technologies, our burgeoning space industry, artificial intelligence, and the broad impact of technology on established sectors. Australia is becoming a globally important player in quantum computing, already hosting some of the most advanced research in the world. In space, we can leverage our talent and our scientific and geographical advantages.
The final chapter, "Health, medtech, and biomedicine", celebrates Australia’s great successes in the field, such as the invention of ultrasound, the Cochlear ear implant and the electronic heart pacemaker. More critically this chapter examines how it has in recent years Australia has not captured the full value of its medical research.
The chapter features opinion pieces from research institutes and industry giants Pfizer, Janssen, Novartis and AstraZeneca. One of Australia’s recent Nobel Laureates, microbiologist Barry Marshall, offers a novel perspective on how to close the gap to true innovation.
Take your time with these pieces. They are gems of wisdom from the greatest minds in Australia. Consider the vantage point of each voice, and note that this is but a small slice of our nation’s vast wealth of expertise and knowledge, though one that we feel is representative.
As the following essay examines, there are many successes and clear shortcomings in Australia's innovation efforts. But our potential is limitless.
This article is taken from the recently published digital book
Australia's Nobel Laureates Vol III State of our Innovation Nation: 2021 and Beyond