Delaware remains Innovation Champion in annual report

166
Advertisement

 

High Internet speeds and laws that bar discrimination by sexual preference were among the factors helped Delaware remain an Innovation Champion, according to an annual report from the Consumer Technology Association.

 Delaware was one of 10  states, including four first-time winners, are the best places in the country to create high-paying jobs and promote innovation-friendly policies, according to the Consumer Technology Association’s (CTA) 2017 Innovation Scorecard. The scorecard gives grades, rather than rankings. 

Colorado, Maryland, New Hampshire and Washington earned the Scorecard’s top designation of Innovation Champion for the first time, joining returning champions Delaware, Massachusetts, Michigan, North Dakota, Utah and Virginia.

Advertisement

The lack of a right to work law was viewed as a minus for the state, with the passage of legislation that allows ride-sharing services like Uber and Lyft to operate, viewed as pluses.

 “States are the laboratories of democracy – and right now we have 50 experiments happening across the country, with each state working to grow their economy and be home to the next big idea,” said Gary Shapiro,  CEO, CTA. “As they seek ways to drive growth and encourage homegrown entrepreneurs, state legislatures and governors should look to the innovation-friendly policies and best practices outlined in this report that advance job creation, local fuel economies and drive a state’s bottom line.”

Two other states improved their year-over-year Scorecard ranking: Connecticut and Illinois. Fourteen states enacted burdensome rules or otherwise inhibited homegrown innovation, thereby dropping in ranking: Arizona, Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, Nevada, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Wisconsin and Wyoming.

According to the report, job creation is bouncing back across the country, while American entrepreneurship is on the decline. Period-over-period comparisons show a majority of states experienced job growth; 24 states posted double-digit job gains. Arkansas leads the country in job creation, experiencing a 62 percent increase over the period 2010-2013. Although nearly all states added jobs, 48 states saw a drop in the number of new small businesses created.

“While the economy is growing and adding jobs, the decline in entrepreneurship is alarming,” said Shapiro. “Now is the time for states to start modernizing their laws to ensure startups have access to capital, minimal red tape and other low barriers to entry. History has proven that young entrepreneurial companies are the driving force of the economy. Each state needs to develop an innovation agenda if they want to be home to the next big technological revolution that will improve lives and create jobs.”

Among the Scorecard’s other findings: Iowa, Nevada and Utah are best suited to attract talented and diverse workers thanks to favorable right-to-work laws and strong protections against sexual orientation and gender identity discrimination.

The largest number of tech workers per capita live in Massachusetts, Virginia, Colorado, Washington, Minnesota and Maryland.

The Northeast region is home to some of the country’s fastest internet speeds, with Rhode Island, Delaware, Massachusetts and Maryland leading the nation.

“for the first time this year, the Scorecard grades states on their support for self-driving cars.

The 2017 Innovation Scorecard rankings are based on ten indicators comparing economic and educational data and the regulatory frameworks for workplace flexibility, ridesharing, home sharing, self-driving cars, drones and sustainable policies.

 Click here to review the report and rankings.

Advertisement
Previous articleRibbon cut for Dover boutique
Next articleDebt-free, fully occupied Community Service Building marks 20th anniversary
Delaware Business Now is a four-year-old, five-day-a-week newsletter and website operated by Bird Street Media LLC. Publisher and Chief Content Officer is Doug Rainey, a 30-year veteran of business journalism in the state of Delaware.  Business Now focuses on breaking business news in Delaware and immediate adjacent areas with apropriate background and perspective. Also offered exclusively in our FREE newsletter is commentary on state and regional issues. Have a complaint, question or even a compliment? Send an email to drainey@delawarebusinessnow.com. For advertising information, click on the About tab at the top of the home page Our business hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Call us at 302.753.0691.
Advertisement