Regional institutions collaborate to discuss new ways of strengthening innovation-based economic development

Leaders from local academic and economic development institutions discuss the role of higher education in spurring new economic growth.

The Regional Summit on Higher Education and Economic Development attracted local leaders for a discussion on how to create new jobs and encourage industry growth.

Event focused on links between higher education and economic development

Release Date: October 25, 2013 This content is archived.

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“The importance of higher education as a purveyor of science and technology and a driver of the knowledge-based economy is increasing everywhere. ”
D. Bruce Johnstone, summit presenter and former SUNY chancellor

Buffalo, N.Y. – Leaders from seven regional academic and economic development institutions today participated in a panel discussion about the role of higher education in spurring new economic growth.

The Regional Summit on Higher Education and Economic Development was held at the University at Buffalo’s Clinical and Translational Research Center and featured an interactive session to discuss how academic institutions, through research-based innovation, technology transfer and other means, can help create new jobs and encourage the growth of industry.

Panelists included:

  • Howard Cohen, PhD, Interim President, SUNY Buffalo State
  • Charles Edmondson, PhD, President, Alfred University
  • Dottie Gallagher-Cohen, President and CEO, Buffalo Niagara Partnership
  • Virginia Schaefer Horvath, PhD, President, SUNY Fredonia
  • Jack Quinn, President, Erie Community College
  • Satish K. Tripathi, PhD, President, University at Buffalo
  • Howard Zemsky, Co-chair, Western New York Regional Economic Development Council

The event was moderated by Grove Potter, executive business editor of The Buffalo News, and featured remarks from former SUNY chancellor D. Bruce Johnstone, PhD, and Jason E. Lane, PhD, deputy director for research at the Rockefeller Institute of Government. Johnstone and Lane are co-authors of the new book “Universities and Colleges as Economic Drivers.”

Johnstone says the role that higher education institutions play in economic development is complex and multifaceted, which is true both in Western New York and beyond.
 
“The importance of higher education as a purveyor of science and technology and a driver of the knowledge-based economy is increasing everywhere,” said Johnstone, who is also a SUNY Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus in UB’s Graduate School of Education.
 
“The emphasis of the public eye tends to be on universities as generators of patents and knowledge-based startups, á la Silicon Valley and the Research Triangle, and there’s much truth to that,” Johnstone said. “But my own feeling is that the connection between a regional economy and colleges and universities is much broader than that and extends to producing workers who are disciplined and knowledgeable, who are trainable on the job and have the foundational skills and work habits that constitute an increasingly productive workforce.”

The panel was made possible by the participating institutions noted and the Western New York Consortium of Higher Education, with support from the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government. Similar events have been hosted across the state with the goal of encouraging new collaborations that can lead to innovation-based economic development.

Media Contact Information

Kerry Jones Waring
UB's New York State Center of Excellence in Bioinformatics and Life Sciences
Tel: 716-881-7997
kerryjon@buffalo.edu