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SSTI Digest

Illinois Approves Angel Investment Credit, Extends R&D Credit

Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn recently signed legislation approving a new tax credit to encourage angel investment and extending the state's R&D tax credit one more year. The Innovation Development and Economy Act (SB 2093) allows eligible angel and early-stage institutional investors to take a 25 percent tax credit on investments in small, technology firms. Up to $2 million may be claimed on an individual investment for a $500,000 tax credit. The program is capped at $10 million and will be effective on Jan 1, 2011.

Passed unanimously by the Illinois General Assembly, SB 3655 extends the state's R&D tax credit for one more year. The provision allows for a tax credit equal to 6.5 percent of qualifying expenditures that increase R&D activities in Illinois. These expenditures include, for example, technological and experimental research whose purpose is to develop new or improved components, functions, performance, reliability or quality.

SB 2093 is available at: http://ilga.gov/legislation/publicacts/96/PDF/096-0939.pdf.

SC Changes Endowed Chairs Program & Manufacturing Incentives

Touted as a tool to help the state attract and retain jobs, South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford last week signed into law H. 4478, the Economic Development Competitiveness Act. The new law directs one-third of the state's endowed chairs money be administered by the Coordinating Council on Economic Development — a reform measure that the governor says will help shift its focus to job creation and allow private sector investment to lead public sector investment. Funding previously was administered by an academic panel. The Act also provides several incentives for manufacturing, including renewable energy tax incentives.

To support the state's manufacturers and attract new facilities, the Act includes the following incentives:

New Era Outlined in U.S. Space Policy

A national space agenda based on competition and national pride — the space race as it has been called — fits bygone times, according to the new National Space Policy statement released by the Obama administration on June 28. The new era outlined in the 14-page document calls for space-venturing nations to embrace shared principles of responsibility, peace, transparency, no claims of national sovereignty, and recognizing "purposeful interference" with another nation's space systems is an infringement of that nation's rights and grounds for self-defense or deterrence.

U.S. leadership in space is expected to be maintained through space-related research, assured access to space (e.g., using American-manufactured vehicles for payload launches), enhanced spaced-based global positioning, navigation satellite and timing systems, quality of space professional workforce and interagency cooperation.

Recent Research: Deloitte: U.S. Manufacturing Competitiveness to Decline through 2015

U.S. manufacturing competitiveness will continue to decline, according to the 2010 Global Manufacturing Competitiveness Index (GMCI). Index projections suggest, by 2015, Brazil will have overtaken the U.S. for fourth in the global rankings behind China, India and the Republic of Korea. The report concludes the increasing talent pools worldwide, coupled with higher U.S. wages, have placed U.S. manufacturing at a disadvantage in the global markets. However, the U.S. should remain at the forefront of manufacturing innovation due to a focus on strengthening science and technology research, the strong intellectual property rights (IPR), technology transfer policy, and STEM initiatives.

The report was created through a partnership between Deloitte's Global Manufacturing Industry group and the U.S. Council on Competitiveness. Based on survey responses from more than 400 senior global manufacturing executives and key government decision makers, researchers developed an index that ranked the "10 drivers of global manufacturing competitiveness." Respondents also were asked to rate the overall manufacturing competiveness of 26 countries for 2010 and 2015.

Useful Stats: Federal R&D Obligations by State, FY 2002-07

In 2007, the federal government dedicated $111.4 billion to R&D, an amount roughly equal to 0.81 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP), according to a recent report from the National Science Foundation (NSF). While research-intensive states, such as California, Maryland, Massachusetts and Virginia are the leading targets for federal R&D spending, several other states attracted a comparable amount of federal funding relative to their economies between 2002 and 2007. Montana, Washington, Utah, Tennessee and Colorado led the country in expanding their federal R&D obligations during that five-year period. The District of Columbia and New Mexico rank with the top states in federal obligations relative to their gross state product (GSP). Despite a general pattern of positive growth around much of the country, federal obligation rates fell in many southern states during this period.

Rhode Island Offering $125 Million Loan-Guarantees to Tech Firms

On June 11, Gov. Donald L. Carcieri signed the Job Creation Guaranty Program. Sponsored by House Finance Chairman Steven M. Costantino and Senate Finance Chairman Daniel Da Ponte, the legislation establishes a $125 million dollar loan-guarantee program for the knowledge and technology-based sectors. Under this program, the state will not directly issue any loans. Instead, it will provide state backing to facilitate private loans. The Rhode Island Economic Development Corporation (RIEDC) will administer the program.

Under the program, 75 to 90 percent of each loan made by private lending institutions to qualified businesses will be guaranteed by the RIEDC. Responsibility of the loan only would be assumed by the state if the company defaulted. In cases of default, the RIEDC would request appropriate funding from the state's General Assembly. They also would seize assets from the defaulting business to cover the loss.

Building Momentum: Four Metros Rising from Recessionary Flames

Based on change in Gross Metropolitan Product (GMP), four of the nation's top 100 metro areas are beginning to rebound sharply, moving from the worst impacted by the Great Recession to some of the fastest growing for the most recent quarter: Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, CA; Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, OH; Bradenton-Sarasota-Venice, FL; and Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, AZ. These upbeat conclusions, drawn from Brookings' latest quarterly MetroMonitor, are coupled with troubling signs for many metro areas across the country.

Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, OH, and Bradenton-Sarasota-Venice, FL - two more metro areas among the 20 that experienced the worst effects of the Great Recession - moved up three quintiles by the most recent quarter to be among the second strongest 20 metro areas for GMP. Only one other metro area jumped three quintiles between maps: Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, AZ, moved from the second overall weakest 20 metro areas to be the nineteenth fastest growing area in the most recent quarter.

$3M Grant Awarded for Regional Network to Support MI Entrepreneurs

A $3 million grant from the New Economy Initiative for Southeast Michigan recently was awarded to a group of four business accelerators working together to support area entrepreneurs and grow Michigan's knowledge-based economy. The grant will support efforts of the newly formed Business Accelerator of Southeast Michigan, which includes Ann Arbor SPARK, Automation Alley, Macomb-OU INCubator, and TechTown. Projects involving venture capital funding, the development of best practices and intellectual property, and plans to build a statewide database listing all business resources for entrepreneurs are in discussion.Read the press release.

Excelsior Program to Replace NY Empire Zone Program

A job creation program to replace New York's Empire Zone Program, often criticized by Gov. David Paterson for its lack of results and soaring cost, was approved this week by lawmakers. The Excelsior Program carries a much smaller price tag than its predecessor and limits the focus to seven industry sectors seen as having high job growth potential. Funding for the program is capped at $50 million per year for a total $250 million when fully implemented. Annual Empire Zone expenditures exceeded $550 million, according to the governor's office.

Benefits offered under the new program include a jobs tax credit of up to $5,000 per job based on salary and benefit levels, an industrial tax credit of 2 percent of qualified investments, and an R&D tax credit of 10 percent of the federal R&D tax credit that can be allocated to the state. Businesses located within existing investment zones and regionally significant projects also are eligible to receive 50 percent of the Real Property Tax Credit in one year, phasing down to 10 percent in year five.

Measuring the Impact of Federal R&D (Finally)

The vast majority of basic research performed in this country is funded by the federal government, so odds are most innovations also stem from our federal research investments, right? The generalization may seem logical but it could never be proven. Let alone following research through to any resulting technologies, it is currently impossible even to tell the number of jobs resulting from federal research investments–supporting people in positions ranging from top of the field faculty researchers to research assistants, lab technicians, and administrative/custodial support staff.

Apart from anecdotes of individual success stories and single-program assessments, it is difficult to develop a reliable sense for impact federal R&D investment has on the economy. That finally may be changing as a result of a new multi-agency initiative lead by the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, that promises to monitor the impact of federal science investments on employment, knowledge generation, and health outcomes.

Buying Time: Patent Office Seeks Comments on Three-Track Program

The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) invites public comment on a proposed new patent examination initiative that would provide applicants greater control over the speed with which their applications are examined and promote greater efficiency in the patent examination process. The new "Three-Track" program aims both to provide applicants with the timing of examination they need and to reduce pendency of patent applications.

Under the proposed "Three-Track" initiative, for applications filed first in the United States, an applicant may request:

  • Track I:  prioritized examination;
  • Track II:  traditional examination under the current procedures;
  • Track III:  for non-continuing applications first filed in the USPTO, an applicant-controlled delay for up to 30 months prior to docketing for examination.

 

Medvedev envisions a "Russian Silicon Valley"

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev plans to spur Russia's economic modernization through the Skolkovo innovation center. Currently in the planning stage, the research hub will be at the heart of Russia's modernization strategy. Energy, IT, telecommunications, biotechnology and nuclear technology are the five "presidential" research priorities at Skolkovo. On his current American visit, President Medvedev will attempt to attract talent and private investment from Silicon Valley. Cisco already has committed to a partnership with Skolkovo. Siguler Guff & Company, a U.S.-based private equity firm with over $8.5 billion of assets under management, is investing $250 million in digital infrastructure and IT services for Skolkovo. Tax breaks, increasing foreign direct investment and privatization of some state enterprises are included in President Medvedev's economic modernization strategy.

Read more about the Sholkovo Innovation Center: http://eng.news.kremlin.ru/by-theme/10