clusters

Cluster Allow for "Job Creation on a Budget," Finds Report

With the fears of rising state deficits and high unemployment, states must make tough decisions regarding their economic development efforts in the coming years. Researchers at the Brookings Institute contend that states should focus on regional economic clusters because it provides a "low-cost means" to reignite innovation, entrepreneurship and job creation. "Organic" job growth should be the focus of state economic development, according to the report — Job Creation on a Budget. The researchers say, "Some 95 percent of all job gains in a year in an average state come from the expansion of existing businesses or the birth of new establishments (i.e., organic factors of job growth)." These efforts also take significantly smaller financial commitments by the state and provide a more streamlined approach to achieve meaningful job growth than other more conventional economic development efforts.

Decline in U.S. Manufacturing: to Cluster or Diversify One's Economy?

A recent Brookings Institution report looks at the nearly 30-year impact of manufacturing's global realignment on US metropolitan areas, finding those with the highest dependence on manufacturing were impacted in several negative ways in addition to the losses in manufacturing. In particular, the resilience of the most manufacturing-centered economies — their ability to transition employment into other sectors — was particularly poor, many experiencing below national average growth in jobs and wages. Brookings reports only 3 of the 114 metro areas in the study exceeded the national averages for both jobs and wages: Charlotte, Manchester and Portland, ME.

Tech Talkin' Govs: Part I

The 11th Annual Tech Talkin' Govs series highlights new and expanded TBED proposals from governors' State of the State, Budget and Inaugural Addresses across the nation. The first edition includes excerpts from speeches delivered in the following states:

Funding for Economic Clusters Among Utah Governor's Proposals

Building on the state's seven economic clusters identified to grow the economy through targeted investments in emerging industries, Gov. Gary Herbert is asking lawmakers to provide $500,000 in FY12 to plan and identify for additional projects. The Utah Cluster Acceleration Partnership (UCAP) is a collaboration of leaders from industry, state government, higher education, and workforce charged with developing strategies to develop industry-driven education and training services, leverage resources from higher education to accelerate industry clusters, and identify best practices.

Recent Research: Knowledge Spillover: Automatic or Cultivated?

Academics and policymakers should "be more careful with the assumption that technological knowledge spillovers and networks occur automatically in innovative clusters," according to a recent article on the Cambridge IT cluster. The report, Do Clusters Really Matter for Innovation Practices in Information Technology? Questioning the Significance of Technological Knowledge Spillovers, examines the impact that a cluster has on R&D workers in IT field with an emphasis on territorial learning and knowledge spillovers. Over 100 IT professionals in various R&D job positions — junior developers, Chief Technology Officers to Managing Directors at small firms — from Cambridge, United Kingdom (UK) were surveyed or interviewed. The region's IT cluster is widely considered "one of most innovative and successful high-technology region in the UK and the EU." Author Franz Huber found that 49.1% R&D workers did not find clustering to be "beneficial for their work." However, Huber quickly points out that Cambridge's "guarded culture" may reduce the amount of formal and informal diffusions of knowledge.

SBA Selects 10 Regional Efforts for Cluster

The Small Business Administration (SBA) announced the selection of 10 regional economic development and job creation efforts through a new pilot program, Innovative Economies, that supports small business participation in regional economic clusters. SBA's funding is designed to expand the opportunities and the role small businesses play in these regional collaborations. The awardees were selected from among 173 applicants. Awards went to organizations in: Alabama, California, Connecticut, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Carolina, Ohio and South Carolina. Read the full release

Michigan's Programs Having Significant Impact

Since 2006, Michigan's economic development programs designed to transition its economy from the traditional manufacturing-based economy to an economy driven by clusters of innovative manufacturers and service providershave led to more than 24,407 direct and indirect jobs created or retained, the creation of approximately 1,500 new companies and almost 900 patents. A Foundation for the New Michigan Economyprepared by the Michigan Economic Development Corporation details the initial results of three programs —the 21st Century Jobs Fund (21st CJF), the Michigan Life Sciences Corridor (MLSC) and the Michigan Technology Tri-Corridor (MTTC) —that are designed to commercialize new technologies and increase access to capital for new and existing businesses.

Join the Southern Advanced Materials in Transportation Alliance (SAMTA)

Want to participate in a new concept in innovation clusters? The Southern Advanced Materials in Transportation Alliance (SAMTA) is a regional innovation cluster that promotes the research, commercialization, and production of new and specialized materials important to the automotive and aerospace industries. Although traditional clusters are based on geographic concentration, SAMTA will use telecommunications networks to minimize geographic distance and facilitate the industry network. The Economic Development Administration has provided seed funding for this project. If you are a researcher, businessperson, or advocate, working in, or with facilities in the South and want to be on the mailing list, email Scott Doron at sdoron@southern.org.

Brookings Explores Cluster-Based Frameworks for Economic Development

Regional innovation clusters can be a useful framework in understanding the high-tech economy, but only if local leaders recognize the limits of cluster-based strategies, according to a recent study by the Brookings Institution. Authors Mark Muro and Bruce Katz suggest that research has confirmed the positive impact clusters can have for local workers, firms and regions, but that effective policy interventions must focus on targeted initiatives to foster existing clusters. Clusters cannot be created out of nothing, and regional efforts should instead help to develop clusters where there is evidence of under-performance. Read "How Regional Innovation Clusters Can Foster the Next Economy" at: http://www.brookings.edu/papers/2010/0921_clusters_muro_katz.aspx.

Exploring the Relationship Between Scientist Human Capital and Firm Performance: The Case of Biomedical Academic Entrepreneurs in the SBIR Program

January 01, 2007

This report investigates if the background of an entrepreneurial researcher makes an impact on the activities of the firm. The authors find that biomedical academic entrepreneurs with human capital oriented toward exploring scientific opportunities significantly improve their firms performance of research tasks such as proof of concept studies. Biomedical academic entrepreneurs with human capital oriented toward exploring commercial opportunities significantly improve their firms performance of invention oriented tasks such as patenting.

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