Technology Assessment Framework
Technology Assessment Framework
Provides a concise but comprehensive description of how impacts in the economy are
derived from government support of technology development by companies.
HAL has developed a reputation for thorough economic and social analysis. The focus of
many federal S&T programs, and the rationale for continued federal support, has shifted
towards clearly serving the needs of stakeholders and demonstrating benefits. We have
used our technology assessment methodology in support of federal and provincial
departments and agencies interested in determining these benefits. The methodology has
been shown to be a useful tool in providing structure and consistency to our quantitative
and qualitative assessments.
Framework Overview
A concise but comprehensive description of how impacts in the economy are derived from
technological activity is essential to provide a common understanding of the roles of the
different participants. The HAL Technology Assessment Framework shown below
provides this description. It has been used to:
The HAL Technology Assessment Framework has five main parts. Central to the
framework is the Study Company that undertakes contracted activities, technology
development activities, and product development, production and marketing activities.
The Study Company is influenced and assisted by the government through the
procurement of goods and services, the activities of government laboratories, and
government programs. The study company, in turn, influences the rest of Canadian
industry by forming formal and informal alliances with other companies, and by
unintentional diffusion of skills and knowledge to other companies. The Study Company
also affects the Canadian users of its goods and services by providing quality and
productivity improvements in their activities. In the end, the activities of the study
companies, Canadian government, Canadian Industry, and Canadian Users result in
impacts on the Canadian economy in the form of infrastructure improvements, wealth
creation, and the public good.
Each of the five parts of the HAL Technology Assessment Framework is described in
more detail in the following sections. Finally, considerations that influence application of
the Framework are discussed in the last section.
Government can influence and assist companies through the procurement of goods and
services, the availability of government laboratory services, and provision of various
government programs.
Procurement
Canada is not as protective of domestic suppliers as many countries when procuring high
technology products, but regional industrial benefits have been stressed in many large
projects.
Laboratories
• Research and development are the traditional activities usually associated with a
laboratory. However, R&D is not limited to technology development; R&D is also
necessary for Product Development and Application Development.
• Education and training are the activities that spread the results of R&D to the
audiences which can use them in productive ways.
• Facilities and personnel can be provided in national laboratories for use under
contract. Often, individual organizations cannot justify the investment necessary to
obtain expensive or scarce expertise and equipment. By providing a central source
in a public sector laboratory, these resources can be shared to the mutual benefit of
all parties.
Programs
Government can help industry develop and adopt new competitive technologies in a
number of ways:
• Money: Government can provide financial support for R&D, for demonstrations,
for export-related marketing, for training, etc.
• Strategic direction: Government can play a leadership role by pointing the
direction for new strategic technologies.
• Guidance and support: Government can help firms by providing information such
as how to start up a new business, what the market and economic conditions are in
certain areas, where to seek strategic alliances.
• Standards and regulations: Government can set standards and regulations which
help to protect consumers and decrease their risk aversion, reduce the cost of
combining technologies or products, and increase marketability.
• Fiscal policy: Governments can provide incentives for innovation by methods such
as R&D tax credits.
• Encourage technology diffusion: Government can encourage technology diffusion
by removing barriers to inter-firm cooperation.
In the early stages of the development cycle, government assistance often plays a major
role. The rationale for this assistance is twofold:
• The private sector typically under-invests in research and development because the
benefits which accrue to this kind of activity cannot be adequately captured by the
firm (improved understanding cannot be readily marketed or patented). Also, the
level of risk and uncertainty about activity costs and likely outcomes is such that
one firm often cannot afford to undertake the activity.
• Barriers to the successful market development of a major new product or system
may exist when reliability, performance and cost are not well enough known or
not yet demonstrated. Government assistance or involvement in demonstration
projects can effectively address these barriers to the benefit of all firms in the
industry and the market segments involved.
The justification for government assistance or intervention is that the increased (or
accelerated) social benefit that accrues because of the government intervention would
exceed the social costs.
In the later stages of the development cycle, government assistance often involves more
general enterprise development. The reason for government intervention here is generally
industrial development, regional development, employment generation, etc. that are
consistent with government and social priorities and objectives.
Study Company
Contracted Activities
Contracted activity can be of two types: funded R&D, and deliverables. Funded R&D
supports the deliverable portion of the contract, but can also produce spinoffs into other
technology development in the company. Deliverable activity is the production of a good
or service. Such activity can generate spin-offs into other company products.
Spin-off activity is undertaken without support from the contracting agency (government)
but is a result of the contracted activity. Spin-off activity, by definition, occurs only within
the organizations directly involved in the contracted activities. All other induced activity
is defined to be as a result of diffusion.
Spin-off activity results when the expertise and capabilities attained through the firms'
involvement in the contracted activity are found to be useful in other applications.
Possession of a skilled and experienced labour force, production facilities, technological
and project management expertise, and so on, will make a significant contribution to the
competitiveness of the company.
Factors that characterize the relationship between contracted activity and spin-offs
include:
• The capability of firms that undertake the contracted activity to pursue spin-offs
and innovations at the same time as performing the contracted activity; and
• A long list of product and market development factors (time lags due to
certification, registration, patenting, etc., competition from foreign sources, market
conditions, business conditions, etc.) even after the initiative has been taken and
the technology has been transferred but before the product becomes a profitable
venture.
Technology Development
Often as the result of contracted activities, but also because of other imperatives,
companies develop and adapt new technologies. In his book on the economics of
industrial innovation, Freeman (1974) proposes a classification of the technological
strategies of firms:
• The offensive strategy involved high levels of R&D expenditures with the goal of
bringing radical new products, processes or modes of organization to the market
place and maintaining a leading position.
• The defensive strategy was that of firms with a somewhat lower level of R&D but
the commitment to closely adopt the innovations of the industry leaders,
eventually with some degree of product differentiation.
• The imitative strategy is that of the firms with a low level of R&D, following
behind both the leaders and their close followers, but thriving on the particular
country or firm specific advantage, such as labour costs, tariff or non-tariff
protection, a good marketing network or geographical position.
• The dependent strategy is that of smaller firms with almost non-existent R&D,
usually subordinate, subcontracting activities, such as component manufacturers.
• The traditional strategy involves no R&D, and is feasible in industries in which the
technological frontier moves slowly, if at all, such as tobacco or some areas of
food and beverage.
• The opportunist strategy is that of smaller firms finding niches left unoccupied by
industry leaders and requiring different levels of in-house R&D.
New products result from contracted activities and technology development activities.
Canadian Industry
Alliances
The term alliance is used here to refer to any extended relationship (formal or informal)
between the study company and a supplier, customer, or competitor. Subcontractors for
contracted activities are considered allied companies. The purpose of the alliance could
include technology development, product development, or marketing. Transfers from the
case study company to the allied company could include people, technology, concepts, or
market access. The degree of impact will depend on:
• The capability and desire of the allied company to investigate and evaluate new
technologies;
• The degree of linkage between the study company and the allied company; and
• The number of firms involved.
Diffusion
Other companies, which do not have a relationship with the Study Company, can gain
people, technology, or concepts through diffusion.
Canadian Users
There are impacts in the Canadian economy resulting from the application of innovative
technology by industrial performers. Benefits from the use and application of technologies
in Canada, other than for the firms that produce and sell those technologies, are very
difficult to estimate. The benefits that accrue are usually in the form of improved product
quality or lower cost of production in the field of application. Such improvements
improve the competitiveness of Canadian firms and result in economic development
benefits. It is recognized, however, that many such new technologies would likely be
available from outside of Canada. Therefore the incremental benefit comes mainly from
the advanced timeliness of such developments for Canadian firms or from the application
of technology in manners particularly suited to Canadian conditions.
Canadian Impacts
Economic returns from technology come from the commercialization and application of
the technology rather than from its development. Economic activity resulting from a
million dollars worth of development of technology is essentially the same as from a
million dollars worth of road building (or any other activity). The development of
technology creates greater returns from investment because of its commercialization and
application potential. When assessing the potential payoff from technology development,
it is these downstream benefits that must be identified and estimated.
Wealth creation comes from the production and sale of goods and services. Impacts
include:
• Employment effects;
• Trade of goods and services;
• Productivity effects; and
• Exports and import substitution.
Infrastructure
• Quality of life;
• Public safety;
• Public health;
• National security;
• Environment; and
• National pride.
Considerations
When analyzing the results of a program, the following considerations should be kept in
mind.
Incrementality
The impacts and effects to be considered are those which are directly due to the
government action under review. These impacts and effects are called incremental, which
is defined as the difference between what did happen with the government action (such as
procurement), and what would have happened if the action had not been taken. If nothing
changes as a result of the action, impacts and effects are the same with and without the
action, and incrementality would be zero.
Attribution
Time frame plays an important role in the assessment of impacts. The major benefits
attributable to R&D and technology transfer will accrue to society long after completion
of particular government activities and over many years into the future.
This causes difficulties for identifying and measuring impacts and attributing them to the
originating activity. These difficulties involve:
• The uncertainty of the level of benefits and costs from any particular
implementation of technology