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Finding and filling the gaps in the Australian government's innovation and entrepreneurship support spectra

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-07-12, 13:51 authored by Kevin Hindle, John Yencken
A national innovation system is concerned with the full process of converting new knowledge into commercially viable results. Governments are policy-active in trying to create productive national innovation systems. This paper reviews ways of thinking about entrepreneurship as the commercialisation component of Australia’s innovation system. The paper explores the impact and relevance of selected existing Australian Commonwealth, and to a lesser extent State government, programs for the commercialisation channels so identified, using four frameworks for the analysis: financial, management/start-up, innovation and entrepreneurial. The analysis indicates program initiatives covering the later development and commercialization phases, but serious gaps in the support available for the entrepreneurship phase involving the act of new entry. This gap is covered by research provider business development people and to a limited extent by incubator and State government initiatives. A critical issue has been and is access to smaller amounts of seed finance. The critical human component is the education of public servants and politicians about the nature and operation of entrepreneurship.

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISBN

9780855908096

Conference name

Regional Frontiers of Entrepreneurship Research 2005, the 2nd Annual AGSE International Entrepreneurship Research Exchange, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 10-11 February 2005

Pagination

24 pp

Publisher

Swinburne University of Technology

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2005 The authors.

Language

eng

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