ASEAN and Asian Emerging Markets: From Exporting to Innovating
The 2nd Seminar on Board of Trade of Thailand’ Strategy Innovating Business Reform to Move Forward
George Abonyi Visiting Professor
Department of Public Administration and Executive Education ProgramMaxwell School, Syracuse University
30 September 2015
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Thailand: sustained development success
Thailand has achieved a remarkable combination of sustained rapid growth, macroeconomic stability, economic diversification, declining poverty, until the Asian Crisis of 1997-98
Asian Crisis eroded but did not erase gains from growth and development; and the economy generally recovered
Since the Asian Crisis, economic performance has been moderate; and there are concerns that Thailand has fallen into the “middle-income trap”
Source: Pasuk (2014)
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From sustained development sustained development success success to Middle Income TrapMiddle Income TrapSource: Ohno (2011)
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Income growth stalled• Manufactured exports stalled
Trap: between low-wage
manufacturers and
high-wage innovators
Export-driven growth Source: NESDB, 2015
Key role of exports in driving growth to date
• Import intensity of exports, e.g. hard disk drive (HDD) Note: Significant drop in investment since Asian Crisis (1997/8);
particularly private investment
• Key reason for infrastructure investment need, e.g. logistics
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Manufactures dominate exports (% share of exports) Source: Ministry of Commerce, NESDB 2015
Electronics and Electrical: 30% of exports (2014)• Automotive (parts, assembly): around to 10%
Compare with rubber products: under 3% of exports• Yet Thailand is the world’s largest producer/exporter of natural rubber
• But close to 90% of rubber exports is not manufactures – little value added
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CHALLENGE
Manufactured exports, key driver of growth, have stalled•Product/production challenge•Market challengeMarket challenge
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Product Challenge: What/HowProduct Challenge: What/How
Manufactured exports diversified and increased in sophistication, e.g. hard disk drive (HDD)
Thailand is losing comparative advantage in low-wage sectors (+ demography, e.g. migrant workers)
Most Thai firms, unlike in Korea or Taiwan, have not used low-cost labour advantage for knowledge-based capabilities to compete: upgrade (innovate), e.g. HDD
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Example: Thailand’s position in the Hard Disk Drive (HDD) Global Value Chain (GVC)Source: Hiratsuka (2006)
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Stuck in the middle of the GVC “smile curve”with lagging productivity: challenge of process and product innovationinnovation
Stuck in the middle? Value Added per Worker in 1990,
2000, 2010: USA figure = 100Source: Suehiro (2015)
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Market challenge: “New normal” and “greater divergence” in the global economySource: IMF WEO, July 2015; October 2008
Slow-growth global economy esp. developed economies; slowing but relatively faster growth in Asian emerging economies
• Especially ASEAN, China, India (ACI) And political uncertainty of economic management (e.g. EU, China)
Source: IMF WEO, July 2015, October 2008
Note: IMF has continually overestimated growth since 2009
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Thailand’s changing export markets (%) and the role of China Source: Suehiro (2015), NESDB
China is now the largest single market for Thai exports – but misleading
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Developed economies and China as markets: slowing
Developed economies (particularly US) driving region’s growth as final markets• Intra-ASEAN trade is less than 25% of its total trade
Developed economies’ anemic growthSource: Lim and Lim (2012)
• China has imported 50% of all intra-regional intermediate exports (parts, components); but for final export to developed economies economies, e.g. iPhones to US and EU (source: ADB, 2011)
• China: rebalancing and extended slow growth• From high (national) savings and related
investment- and export-driven model;
to domestic consumption driven growth• Challenge of “political economy”
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China’s investment-driven growth: increasing debt, declining efficiency,most new debt is to service old debt
China’s increasing debt and composition – mostly SOEs and local government
• Nearly 50% related to real estate
Source: MGI (2015)
Growing non-productive overinvestment: i.e. declining efficiency of investment
(Marginal Product of Capital)Source: Ha Jiming, Goldman Sachs China (2015)
S
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Key Chinese activity indicators Nearly every industry is at 30% or more overcapacity
• Average accounts receivable for consumer electronics retailers/manufacturers:123 days
• Average days of inventory for clothing companies: 174 days (Bloomberg 2015)
Source: Haver Analytics, in Financial Times, 19 Aug. 2015
China’s import growth has declined significantly
Source: OECD, 16 Sept. 2015
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China market challenge
China’s rebalancing from investment to consumption-driven growth even if smoothly successful, will mean extended slow growth; AND does not automatically translate into increased imports of final manufactures
China as market for final goods is shaped not by size or growth of GDP, but capacity to generate net demand for import of final manufactures • China has been major importer of Thailand’s/region’s exports of parts and components; but for its
final exports to developed economies, e.g. iPhones to US and EU
To become a growth locomotive for manufactures of Thailand and region China would need to raise not only its domestic consumption as a share of GDP, but also its imports of final goods from the region
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OPPORTUNITY
Over the longer term, Asian emerging markets – particularly ASEAN, China, and India (ACI); but different from developed economies, Thailand’s traditional final markets.
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Future of Asia is bright By 2030 40% of global consumer spending from Asia, especially ACISource for figures: Australian Government White Paper (2013)Note: assumes China will grow on average by 7% p.a. 2012 - 2025
Asia’s rising share of global GDP Asia’s rising incomes (Bubble area reflects size of GDP; income per person in PPP)
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ASEAN consumer expenditure is increasing…but unevenlySource: Euromonitor International (2015)
ASEAN’s Real GDP Growth and Total Consumer Expenditure: 2000 – 2014• Averaged 5.4% p.a.; expanded by 117% in real
terms to reach $1.4 trillion in 2014
By 2030 ASEAN to be the 3rd largest economy, after US and China, worth $3.1 trillion in constant 2014 dollars
Consumer Expenditure per Household in ASEAN:
2014 and 2030
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Asian emerging markets and consumers are different
But significantly lower disposable incomes in AEC in coming years as compared with developed
economies, region’s traditional final markets (source: Lawrence, ADBI (2013))
Fragmented markets,
growing income inequality,
and high proportion of
rural population will condition
consumer spending
Per Capita Real Annual Gross Income
in China and USA (1990–2030)Reflects consumers’ purchasing powerIn 2030: narrower, but US still 4.6 x China
Source: Euromonitor International (2014)
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Consumer is at the centre of understanding market potential Source: Euromonitor International (2015)
Household Income Distribution in ASEAN: 2014
Households by Annual Disposable Income Band in ASEAN: 2014 and 2030
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RESPONSE
From exporting to innovating for Asian emerging market consumers – but with a difference
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The not-so-good news: Thailand is lagging on traditional measures of innovation such as R&DSource: NESDB, ADB
R&D as % share of GDP
Thai private sector's share of investment in total R&D is around 35-45%, vs. 77% for Korea, 76% for Taiwan, 66% for Singapore
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Other constraints on innovatione.g. UNCTAD (2015); Abonyi/ADB (2014)
Institutional constraints• Public/government – programs, agencies
• Private – domestic, multinationals
• Education/research
Financial constraints Conceptual constraintConceptual constraint
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Narrow concept of innovation Narrow concept of innovation driving policies, programs, driving policies, programs, corporate strategiescorporate strategies Innovation-related policies and programs typically focus on supply-side
interventions for “mainstream markets”
• Firm-level innovation geared generally for “advanced consumers” either in developed markets or higher income consumers in emerging markets
• Focus on links between formal science and innovation – i.e. science, technology, innovation or STI -- in particular, R&D-intensive higher technology activities
• Inputs, e.g. PhDs, outputs: e.g. scientific publications (e.g. UNCTAD 2015)
Traditional STI policies and programs inadequately support innovation that is not high-level ST-intensive, e.g. incremental or adaptive innovation; for lower-income groups (e.g. lower middle-income; upper end of lower income)
• STI policy and corporate strategy generally fail to appreciate the potential contribution of such innovation to competitive export performance
AND increasingly:AND increasingly: New ecosystem of innovation: e.g. cheaper, faster, smaller, widespread ICT
devices, stakeholder collaboration, allow for easier low-cost market experiments in product/service/business model innovation (“Big Bang Disruption”) New innovations can enter market cheaper, more customizable, than existing productsNew innovations can enter market cheaper, more customizable, than existing products
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The good newsThe good news: wider concept of innovation for Asian emerging markets
Consumers in Asian emerging markets have high aspirations, relatively low incomes, and a variety of constraints
Innovation for these consumers/markets can come not only from investment in high-level R&D and science and technology (STI): many entry points exist for Thai firms to “add value” along the value chain
Challenge to is to strengthen innovation suited to consumers and conditions of Asian emerging markets: requires also a focus on the DEMAND SIDE of innovation
• Investments in marketing, and product-related interactions with consumers may be as or more important to a firm in commercializing new ideas
• Interaction with consumers at early stages of product development is especially important in shaping innovation for emerging markets: innovation as (low cost) experimentation
“Breakthrough customer insights vs. breakthrough technology”
• Disposable income distribution: from “value for money” to (also) “value for many”
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Nokia 1100
Specifically for emerging markets, e.g.
• Dustproof keyboard;
• Front face built-in flashlight;
• Non-slip slides;
• Battery life (stand by) up to 400 hours! Over 250 million sold since late 2003 (to 2015) World's best selling handset and electronics device Example of “frugal innovation”
• And of the nature of the frugal innovation process
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Wider concept of innovation:frugalfrugal and reversereverse innovationSources: e.g. Zechsky et al (2014); Radjou and Prabhu (2014); The Economist (2014)
Frugal innovation Cost Innovation: Same Functionality at a Lower Cost
• Responds to constraints such as income, e.g. purchase price, servicing costs• Example: Huawei (China) smart phone; Hindustan Unilever (India) detergent powder
Good-Enough Innovation: Tailored Functionality at a Lower Cost • Responds to specific customer needs and constraints
• Example: Mettler Toledo scale (China); Wireless computer mouse (Rapoo, Logitech)
Frugal Innovation: New Functionality at a Lower Cost• Responds to specific needs of emerging markets/consumers
• Example: MittiCool clay refrigerator (India); GE ECG (electrocardiogram) MAC 400/800; M-Pesa
Reverse innovation• Innovation for emerging market consumers finds market in developed economies,
where there is increasing demand for lower price/higher value
• Example Haier refrigerator; Logitec M215 wireless mouse; GE ECG MAC 600
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Constraints on frugal innovation
Limited firm knowledge and therefore focus on the needs of lower income populations: not aware of market and revenue potential
Infrastructure (hard/soft) – e.g. roads and distribution channels – is inadequate/constrained, making it costly and difficult for companies to serve lower income (e.g. rural) customers. • E.g. 79% of roads were paved in OECD countries in 2011, but only 53% were
paved in middle-income economies and 21% in low-income economies (World Bank Development Indicators, 2014)
Challenges of scaling up to viable business proposition• Implications: “business model innovation”
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Conventional vs. Frugal and Reverse Innovation: Different paths to emerging regional and global opportunities (e.g. GE Healthymagination)
Conventional Innovation
Frugal and Reverse Innovation
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Products modified (“stripped down”) for emerging market consumers
R&D/innovation and commercialization for developed market consumers & conditions
Needs and conditions in developed markets
Applications in developed markets(Reverse innovationReverse innovation)
Innovation for emerging market consumers and conditions: translate “voice” of consumer into products/services (Frugal Frugal innovationinnovation)
Aspirations and needs in emerging markets
Thailand: Toward innovation-led growth
Thailand has enormous potential for innovation, reflected in the inherent
capacity for design, and globally admired crafts, products and services
Moving from potential to performance requires strengthening “national innovation
system”: government + business + education + NGOs
• Starts from broad concept of innovation, not just high level R&D/S&T
• Includes investments in early stage product-related interactions with consumers on the
“why” and “what” of a product or service; production process improvements; technology
adaptation; and new types of business systems -- including key services (e.g. product
design, marketing, distribution)
• For SMEs: adapting existing technology to local (regional) user needs is a practical way
to commercially viable products and services
Widens greatly scope for innovation and exports for Asian emerging markets
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General agenda for action:Toward innovation-led growth
Policy commitment Coordination/collaboration Focus on key value chains, clusters Integrate demand and supply side factors
• Particular focus on Asian emerging markets Innovative financing mechanisms (SMEs) Cross-border production linkages to upgrade
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Facilitating frugal innovation Incentivize research institutions (public, private) to focus on frugal innovations Develop innovative financing mechanisms for frugal innovation initiatives by SMEs
• E.g. India’s Inclusive Innovation Fund is a for-profit investment fund created to support enterprises (SMEs) and innovators India’s lower income groups
Support intermediary institutions and means of knowledge exchange to provide technical and market/consumer-related expertise and information to frugal innovators
• E.g. Honey Bee Network (e.g. India, China) helps frugal innovators by providing support needed to develop these innovators’ inventions including related to protection of intellectual property, and commercialization of marketable innovations, including connecting SME innovators with formal institutions such as universities and public research institutions
Support partnerships between SMEs and large firms, which have scale but often limited insight into lower income consumers’ needs and constraints; and with NGOs that often have significant insight into and access to lower income (e.g. rural) consumers
• E.g. Oorja Stove (NGOs; large firms) Support early and sustained market/consumer engagement by firms as the key to
facilitating the frugal innovation process (e.g. information, financing, role of ICTrole of ICT)
• E.g. Nokia 1100, Rapoo mouse, GE Mac 400/800
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FRUGAL FRUGAL INNOVATION INNOVATION
AS COLLABORATIONAS COLLABORATIONALONG THE VALUE CHAINALONG THE VALUE CHAIN
THANK [email protected]
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