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Issue Brief Finds Mixed Responses On Effects of Global Business in Minnesota

Monday, February 28, 2005

While wider market opportunities have led to increased exporting and lower costs for business operations in some Minnesota companies, others are facing difficult operational challenges as a result of the rapid integration of global business practices, according to a new Issue Brief from the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED) and Minnesota Technology, Inc.

  • Read more about Issue Brief Finds Mixed Responses On Effects of Global Business in Minnesota

States Reap Quantifiable Benefits through Investments in Higher Ed

Monday, February 28, 2005

The same benefits of higher education to society and individuals found on a national level also are evident at the individual state level and need to be taken into account in state policy discussions, including those on state funding, says a new report from the Institute for Higher Education Policy (IHEP).

  • Read more about States Reap Quantifiable Benefits through Investments in Higher Ed

Recent Research: Are Subsidies Wasted When Tech Firms Fail?

Monday, February 28, 2005

Funding research and development (R&D) is risky business. Using the popular baseball analogies, venture capitalists count on one home run to make up for all of the strikeouts and pop flies. Public support for R&D in private firms, then, could be considered a gamble if policymakers are not patient or understanding of that risk. These programs also must be well managed, with an eye on the market or business aspect of any resulting technologies, to minimize the public's risk.

  • Read more about Recent Research: Are Subsidies Wasted When Tech Firms Fail?

Useful Stats: Top 100 NIH Cities and Five-Year Funding by State

Monday, February 28, 2005

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) data on the top 100 cities for NIH awards in FY 2003 indicates Boston reasserted its leadership over New York for the top spot by increasing its spread by $401 million. Philadelphia and Baltimore remain in third and fourth place for the second year.

  • Read more about Useful Stats: Top 100 NIH Cities and Five-Year Funding by State

University of Toledo Seeks Director for S&T Corridor

Monday, February 28, 2005

The University of Toledo and its partners are seeking a director for the Toledo Science and Technology Corridor. The Corridor is an initiative to enhance the region's innovation-based economy through investments that promote linkages and collaboration among academic institutions, business industries and government entities.

  • Read more about University of Toledo Seeks Director for S&T Corridor

NBIA Teams with LocalFund to Help Match Start-ups with Angels

Friday, April 19, 2002

To help business incubator managers match start-up businesses with private investors through an Internet-based network, the National Business Incubation Association (NBIA) has partnered with LocalFund, Inc., a network service provider based in Billings, Mont.



  • Read more about NBIA Teams with LocalFund to Help Match Start-ups with Angels

Michigan Governor Unveils NextEnergy Blueprint

Friday, April 19, 2002

Michigan Governor John Engler on Thursday unveiled NextEnergy— a comprehensive economic development plan to make Michigan a leader in the research, development, commercialization and manufacture of alternative energy technologies such as hydrogen fuel cells.



  • Read more about Michigan Governor Unveils NextEnergy Blueprint

New National and Local Indices Help Focus Policy Priorities

Friday, April 19, 2002

Preparing an index or report card is often a useful tool for tech-based economic development efforts to assess a geographic area's relative performance across selected statistics or indicators. The outcomes measured, if considered temporally, can help decision makers identify and shift policy and investment priorities for their community, region or state.



  • Read more about New National and Local Indices Help Focus Policy Priorities

Mississippi Technology Alliance Partners with Tribal Government

Friday, April 19, 2002

Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians (MBCI) Tribal Chief Phillip Martin and Mississippi Technology Alliance President and Chief Executive Officer Angie Dvorak recently announced a partnership to help foster science-based economic development for the state of Mississippi. The alliance's partnership with a tribal government is possibly the first of its kind in the U.S.



  • Read more about Mississippi Technology Alliance Partners with Tribal Government

'Working Better Together' Report Shows Collaboration Among Sectors

Friday, April 19, 2002

Changes have led the business community to redefine its performance standards, government to rethink its goals and nonprofits to redouble their efforts to meet rising demands, according to a new report published by the Three Sector Initiative, a collaboration of seven organizations representing business, government and nonprofits.



  • Read more about 'Working Better Together' Report Shows Collaboration Among Sectors

Symposium to Reveal 'Patterns' Shape the Network Society

Friday, April 19, 2002

More than 60 presentations on patterns, or solutions to problems in a given context, figure to be the highlight of CPSR's 8th biannual Directions and Implications of Advanced Computing (DIAC) symposium, "Shaping the Network Society: Patterns for Participation, Action, and Change," being held May 16-19 in Seattle.



  • Read more about Symposium to Reveal 'Patterns' Shape the Network Society

SSTI Weekly Digest Takes Spring Break

Friday, April 19, 2002

The SSTI Weekly Digest will be taking a brief spring break and will resume publication on Friday, May 3. 

  • Read more about SSTI Weekly Digest Takes Spring Break

Tech Talkin' Govs 2005, Part Six

Monday, February 21, 2005

The latest in SSTI's annual "Tech Talkin' Govs" series. Five earlier installments of this 2005 review of governors' legislative priorities concerning tech-based economic development are available through the Digest online: http://www.ssti.org/Digest/digest.htm

Michigan

  • Read more about Tech Talkin' Govs 2005, Part Six

Will Michigan S&T Emerge Winner in Political Battle?

Monday, February 21, 2005

As the only state to have a net job loss in 2004, Michigan's political leadership recognizes something must change. The state's shifting economy, from one defined principally by its manufacturing sector to one that derives growth equally from knowledge-based industries, is at the center of the matter. Michigan policymakers are challenged to create innovative proposals that preserve one facet of the economy while broadening the other.

  • Read more about Will Michigan S&T Emerge Winner in Political Battle?

States Finding Innovative Approaches to Stem 'Brain Drain'

Monday, February 21, 2005

A recent proposal by Senate Republicans in Iowa to eliminate the state income tax for residents under the age of thirty has brought the issue of the out-migration of young, educated adults once again to the forefront.

  • Read more about States Finding Innovative Approaches to Stem 'Brain Drain'

New TBED Efforts to Make Ontario Leader in Innovation

Monday, February 21, 2005

To spur job creation in Ontario, the provincial government recently announced two initiatives focusing on innovation and regional economic growth -- the new Fuel Cell Innovation Program and the newly refocused Northern Ontario Heritage Fund Corporation (NOHFC).

  • Read more about New TBED Efforts to Make Ontario Leader in Innovation

Is Public Higher Ed Threatened by Competition and Privatization?

Monday, February 21, 2005

Statewide efforts addressing all of higher education's public purposes are needed to combat the increasing competition and privatization sweeping the nation's public colleges and universities, says a new report from the Futures Project, Correcting Course: How We Can Restore the Ideals of Public Higher Education in a Market-Driven Era.

  • Read more about Is Public Higher Ed Threatened by Competition and Privatization?

Recent Research: Nurturing Creative Cities

Monday, February 21, 2005

Creativity and curiosity are key ingredients for innovation, so it is not too surprising that many communities are looking for ways to increase the creative spirit among their residents and businesses. The how-to of nurturing creativity does not follow a simple recipe for easy replication across the country, but a recent World Bank working paper provides a broad platform of key ingredients.

  • Read more about Recent Research: Nurturing Creative Cities

West Virginia Economic Development Reorganized

Monday, February 21, 2005

West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin signed last week legislation establishing the Department of Commerce and streamlining the support operations for the state’s economic development efforts. Senate Bill 1002, approved during the recent special session of the West Virginia Legislature, renamed the Bureau of Commerce the Department of Commerce.

  • Read more about West Virginia Economic Development Reorganized

Useful Stats:SSTI Federal Budget Review Available as PDF

Monday, February 21, 2005

The Special Federal Budget Issue of SSTI's Weekly Digest, published electronically in three parts on Feb. 10, is now available for download as a 25-page PDF. As readers are aware, the Administration's budget request proposes significant changes to the federal government's role in supporting economic development, research, investment and community development.

  • Read more about Useful Stats:SSTI Federal Budget Review Available as PDF

NY Governor Announces $304M Redevelopment Plan for Campus

Friday, April 12, 2002

New York Governor George Pataki recently announced a multimillion plan to transform the aging 300-acre W. Averell Harriman State Office Building Campus in Albany, N.Y., into a world-class research and development technology park. 



  • Read more about NY Governor Announces $304M Redevelopment Plan for Campus

Rural Communities Making Technology Work for Them, Report Shows

Friday, April 12, 2002

Ten rural communities and the technologies being used within them are the focus of Networking the Land: Rural America in the Information Age, the latest report released by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) of the Department of Commerce. 



  • Read more about Rural Communities Making Technology Work for Them, Report Shows

Collaborative Planning Focuses Regional Development Efforts

Friday, April 12, 2002

Economic development leaders within the Cedar Rapids/Iowa City Technology Corridor have joined other areas of the U.S. in marketing the area as one unified region. Elected representatives from 10 cities and two counties located in the Cedar Rapids/Iowa City Technology Corridor recently signed a joint proclamation as a statement of support for the Corridor’s targeted industry cluster development regional efforts.

  • Read more about Collaborative Planning Focuses Regional Development Efforts

Can the Innovation Process Survive A Competitive Market?

Friday, April 12, 2002

In Perfectly Competitive Innovation, a March 2002 research department staff report for the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, Michele Boldrin and David K. Levine address whether current copyright, licensing and patent laws which grant monopolist rights to inventors beneficial or harmful to the innovation process. The authors suggest the latter in certain markets. 



  • Read more about Can the Innovation Process Survive A Competitive Market?

Useful Stats: State Rankings of Industrial R&D Intensity, 1997-1999

Friday, April 12, 2002

Industrial R&D intensity — measured by the ratio of industry R&D to Gross State Product (GSP) — can be a useful S&T indicator, because it indicates the level of private sector R&D activity and standardizes the data to eliminate geographic, demographic, historical, and natural resource differences among the states. 



  • Read more about Useful Stats: State Rankings of Industrial R&D Intensity, 1997-1999

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Recent news from the SSTI Digest

The state of US venture capital investment in four charts. How might your innovation startups fare if investment trends hold?

Thursday, January 15, 2026

With 2025 behind us, and some time for the data to stabilize, we can look back at VC activity and try to understand what it means for TBED efforts going forward. The VC storyline of 2025 should be familiar to anyone who has been following investment news. Record funding rounds, huge amounts of capital deployed, questions of an AI bubble. Where amongst the big flashy lights of AI mega-deals do we find the subtlety and nuance that informs TBED investor activity and policy?

venture capital
startups

FSGG appropriations language favors innovation programs

Thursday, January 15, 2026

The Financial Services and General Government appropriations bill for FY 2026 passed the House of Representatives yesterday and now moves to the Senate where passage is also expected. The bill sets spending levels for several agencies supporting regional innovation, economic development, and investment. Foremost are the Treasury and Small Business Administration; selected highlights are provided below.

fy26budget
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New benchmarking tool illuminates how AI is accelerating job market changes

Thursday, January 15, 2026

All too often, jobseekers and employers seem to exist in non-compatible realities. While jobseekers flood the job market with descriptions of their generalized skills in communication, leadership, and problem-solving to fill various roles in different sectors, employers are looking for the more specific skills that will get the job done, say the authors of a report from the Wharton School and Accenture. And they propose that AI is accelerating this shift from a role-based economy to a skills-based economy.

AI
jobs
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