![]() ![]() We firstly discussed the enabling role of design in the context of design as input, output and process of innovation with emphasis on design-enabled innovation conception then European design policies are reviewed in terms of characteristics, priorities and strategies at EU, national and regional levels. Our study aims to explore potential opportunities and challenges of design policies for design-enabled innovation from a bottom-up perspective. ![]() Existing literature on design policy usually adopts a top-down perspective to analyse the components of the design innovation system and ignores the practical needs of practitioners. The free flow of ideas and the creation and diffusion of innovations is dependent on these basic freedoms.Design policy for innovation and prosperity has been acknowledged and adopted globally. The international development community should continue to argue that the diffusion of innovation thrives in societies where freedom of speech, the press, association, and assembly are not only protected but actively encouraged. Closing the large income and gender gaps in internet and mobile phone access should also be prioritized. Under the umbrella of Sustainable Development Goal 9, “foster innovation,” the UN should target universal connectivity of the world population by 2030, with a special focus on the countries where less than 5% of the population is currently connected to the internet. The United Nations (UN), its agencies, and development partners should adopt a new global campaign, “Democratizing Access to Knowledge,” and support the diffusion of pro-development innovations on a grand scale. Countries struggling with low levels of innovation should strive to create cultures where open inquiry, criticism and the pursuit of constant improvements in all spheres are valued and rewarded. Countries could also support innovations that widely diffuse new knowledge quickly in the areas most likely to benefit the poor, especially health, education, and livelihoods. Strategies to achieve these goals could include incentivizing the use of mobile phones and the internet in homes, schools, and workplaces by subsidizing and/or rewarding access for the bottom 40%, including through the tax and transfer systems. All countries should set goals of at least 60% male and female internet and mobile phone usage by 2025, and at least 80% by 2030. To maximize the impact of innovation on development, especially in the countries struggling with poverty, poor health, and low education, investments that increase the ease and pace with which new knowledge is spread should be prioritized. For innovations to reach their full development potential, these access to information gaps between and within countries and genders will need to be closed. An Intel report found that 23% fewer women than men have access to the internet. Gender inequalities in access to information also exist within many countries. Within-country inequalities also exist in most countries, even in the USA where a Pew Research Center reported 90% of adults with a college degree use the internet compared to 70% of adults without a high school diploma. For example, there are vast global inequalities in both internet and mobile phone access, with internet use varying from less than 10% in many sub-Saharan African countries to above 90% in most North American and European countries. When innovations do not spread easily, the benefits can be captured by minorities handicapping the full development potential of specific advances and increasing inequality, both between and within countries. Friedrich von Hayek made a powerful argument for societies that allow knowledge to diffuse widely and quickly, implying that innovations that enable knowledge to be dispersed can accelerate development, and William Easterly has consistently advocated that the freedoms that underpin the creation and distribution of knowledge are the foundations of development. Jared Diamond argues that although some countries advance through innovation as a result of being “geographically blessed,” others can gain access to innovations if they create a culture that is open to innovation and invest in technologies that allow innovations to spread easily. In contrast, the countries that score lowest on innovation are also the least developed, especially Niger, Mali, Mozambique, Yemen, Guinea, and Ethiopia. Innovation is the wellspring of sustained advances in human development everywhere.Īnd the countries that score highest on the Human Development Index also score highest on the Global Innovation Index (e.g., Switzerland, Hong Kong, Germany, Sweden, the Netherlands, and Denmark). ![]()
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