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Structuring U.S. Innovation Policy: Creating a White House Office of Innovation Policy

Wednesday, June 24, 200909:00 AM to 10:30 AM EST
ITIF1101 K Streetsuite 610 Washington, DC District Of Columbia, 20005

Event Summary

Innovation is central to economic growth and to solving a host of pressing societal challenges. It is therefore critical to ensure that the federal agencies’ actions promote innovation, or at least pursue other social objectives in a manner that is least damaging to innovation. There is no formal process within the executive branch to ensure that this happens, however. In particular, the centralized cost-benefit review performed by OMB’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs generally ignores the impact of agency actions on innovation.

In an ITIF report to be released, Duke Law School professors Stuart Benjamin and Arti Rai propose that the Obama administration (or Congress, if Congress is willing) create an Office of Innovation Policy that would draw upon, and feed into, existing regulatory review processes but would have the specific mission of being the “innovation champion” within these processes.

Please join use for a discussion of this new proposal to create an Office of Innovation Policy.

Speakers

Robert D.
Robert D. Atkinson@RobAtkinsonITIF
President
Information Technology and Innovation Foundation
Moderator
Stuart
Stuart Benjamin
Professor
Duke Law School
Presenter
Arti
Arti Rai
Professor
Duke Law School
Presenter
Stephen
Stephen Merrill
Executive Director
Science, Technology and Economic Policy Program, National Academies of Science
Respondent
Michael
Michael Nelson
Visiting Professor, Communication, Culture & Technology
Georgetown University
Respondent
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