EU Business Innovation: in Decline?

This paper investigates five likely contributing factors to EU business innovation. First there is the effect of low productivity demand, and any resulting slow-down in growth. Might this be exacerbated by a lack of leadership in science? A second factor considered is the supply of entrepreneurial l...

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Main Author: Jeremy Cripps
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University American College Skopje 2019-12-01
Series:AICEI Proceedings
Online Access:http://www.aicei.uacs.edu.mk/document/4c49f56a-a67b-07cb-2338-6f1494819c80
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spelling doaj-b140a6846baf4ffba60e5cfd404c3d6d2021-04-06T11:36:03ZengUniversity American College SkopjeAICEI Proceedings2671-37132671-37132019-12-01141https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3533757EU Business Innovation: in Decline?Jeremy CrippsThis paper investigates five likely contributing factors to EU business innovation. First there is the effect of low productivity demand, and any resulting slow-down in growth. Might this be exacerbated by a lack of leadership in science? A second factor considered is the supply of entrepreneurial leaders. A third contributing factor concerns European investment in research and development when this is compared with similar investment in the United States. A fourth factor considers the impact of investment in “zombie” firms, (companies risking default) in contrast to investment in Europe‟s “unicorn‟ companies (start-up companies valued at over $1 billion). Then the fifth innovation factor may be the impact of European universities efforts to modernize and become entrepreneurial. The methodology used to investigate these five contributing factors is extraction of data from current reports using established performance metrics. The conceptual and operational relevance of the five factors is considered. Data collected for each of the factors is summarized in the paper. The principal data sources include those of the European Union (EU), the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Deming showed how innovation provides “the foundation of our future.” The paper, in final discussion, sees innovation shaping our work, private life, and social networks. Examples of recent business innovation in Europe call for a positive response to the question on innovation decline.http://www.aicei.uacs.edu.mk/document/4c49f56a-a67b-07cb-2338-6f1494819c80
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeremy Cripps
spellingShingle Jeremy Cripps
EU Business Innovation: in Decline?
AICEI Proceedings
author_facet Jeremy Cripps
author_sort Jeremy Cripps
title EU Business Innovation: in Decline?
title_short EU Business Innovation: in Decline?
title_full EU Business Innovation: in Decline?
title_fullStr EU Business Innovation: in Decline?
title_full_unstemmed EU Business Innovation: in Decline?
title_sort eu business innovation: in decline?
publisher University American College Skopje
series AICEI Proceedings
issn 2671-3713
2671-3713
publishDate 2019-12-01
description This paper investigates five likely contributing factors to EU business innovation. First there is the effect of low productivity demand, and any resulting slow-down in growth. Might this be exacerbated by a lack of leadership in science? A second factor considered is the supply of entrepreneurial leaders. A third contributing factor concerns European investment in research and development when this is compared with similar investment in the United States. A fourth factor considers the impact of investment in “zombie” firms, (companies risking default) in contrast to investment in Europe‟s “unicorn‟ companies (start-up companies valued at over $1 billion). Then the fifth innovation factor may be the impact of European universities efforts to modernize and become entrepreneurial. The methodology used to investigate these five contributing factors is extraction of data from current reports using established performance metrics. The conceptual and operational relevance of the five factors is considered. Data collected for each of the factors is summarized in the paper. The principal data sources include those of the European Union (EU), the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Deming showed how innovation provides “the foundation of our future.” The paper, in final discussion, sees innovation shaping our work, private life, and social networks. Examples of recent business innovation in Europe call for a positive response to the question on innovation decline.
url http://www.aicei.uacs.edu.mk/document/4c49f56a-a67b-07cb-2338-6f1494819c80
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