The scale-up state - Singapore’s industrial policy for the digital economy

Thursday 24 October 2024 12:00-13:00,
Elise Ottesen-Jensens building at UiS Campus Ullandhaug,
EOJ-276-277 / Teams.

A Centre for Innovation Research Seminar: The scale-up state - Singapore’s industrial policy for the digital economy.

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Welcome to the Centre for Innovation Research Seminar

  • Date: Thursday October 24th
  • Time: Noon - 1 p.m.
  • Place: UiS School of Business and Law, Elise Ottesen-Jensens building, Room EOJ 276/277 or on Teams (Check link below).

Seminar Speaker:

Professor Neil Lee, of Economic Geography at the London School of Economics and Political Sceince (LSE).

Title of the presentation:

The scale-up state - Singapore’s industrial policy for the digital economy.

Abstract:

The Singaporean state has played a crucial role in the country’s economic development. This led to concerns that a state-steered economy would be unable to develop fast-changing, disruptive sectors that are reliant on individual entrepreneurship, such as digital technology. Yet Singapore has become a world leader in the scaling of digital technology firms. In this paper, we consider how this happened. We show that advances in ICT opened a window of locational opportunity in digital tech, which was spotted by Singaporean policymakers open to experimentation. A distinctive ‘Singapore model’ developed to take advantage of this opportunity, exploiting Singapore’s geographical position, open economy, and business environment but combining this with active state intervention.

To address coordination problems in the creation of an entrepreneurial ecosystem, Singaporean policymakers worked through a process we term ‘network coordination’ across the whole of government. While overall rates of entrepreneurship remain low, the country has been successful at scaling firms in the digital technology sector. These primarily focused on consumer applications and non-Singaporean markets, but there has been little development in frontier ‘deep tech’.

Link to paper at LSE (External site)

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