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© Marc Isabelle 20041 They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation EPIP 3rd seminar Pisa, 02-03 April 2004 Marc ISABELLE IMRI (Université Paris Dauphine) & CEA
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© Marc Isabelle 20042 Outline of the presentation They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation Impetus Background Results (intermediate…) Perspectives Conclusion
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© Marc Isabelle 20043 Impetus What motivates inventors to invent? They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation “Motivations” private economic incentives others “Inventors” “Invent”…, patent & transfer of kn. and techs Are private economic incentives key motivations for researchers in the public sector to invent, patent & transfer knowledge & technologies? researchers in the public sector
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© Marc Isabelle 20044 Background They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation Research project : Coupling between Scientific research & Technological research at CEA. What reality? What possible improvements? Phase I “Identification” Phase I I “Analysis” Phase I I I “Synthesis” Objectives = identifying… – where SR & TR are coupled within CEA – the models, mechanisms & obstacles of that coupling Means = interviews with 32 Research Directors
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© Marc Isabelle 20045 Technological system Scientific system EnergyEnergy DefenceDefence NTIHNTIH Technological research Scientific research and SR-TR coupling About CEA… They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation 2nd largest Public Research Organisation in France Multiple lines of demarcation (Dasgupta & David, 1994) Rise of the knowledge based economy CEA Sustainability TR Legitimacy SR Dynamism SR & TR macro CEA A costs / benefits balance that can be very positive (Nelson, 2000) – NICT matter sciences – biotechnologies life sciences Coupling SR & TR: some costs and some benefits Coexistence and mix of scientific culture and technological culture
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© Marc Isabelle 20046 Phase I ’s observations… They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation Research Directors consistently invent, patent and transfer ( number of patents / year: RDs >> CEA average > National PROs average ) Very weak private financial incentives at CEA for researchers who… Diversity of Research Directors’ research environments While… – invent & patent 1.000 € / patent – transfer knowledge & technologies= 0 % of licensing royalties * No Research Director works in an ivory tower (no Gibbons’ mode 1)
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© Marc Isabelle 20047 Phase I ’s observations… They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation “Research Directors invent like they breathe” inventiveness to a certain extent independent from private economic incentives (Henderson, Jaffe & Trajtenberg, 1998) Motivations to invent, patent & transfer depend on research environment four identified “candidate” models at CEA and their analysis “Research Directors do not patent like they breathe” cultural resistance (in scientific system) yet growing overall acceptance (Coutinho et al., 2003)
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© Marc Isabelle 20048 They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation Inventions identified as a means of SR-TR coupling A generic taxonomy of SR-TR coupling Inputs for Phase II: four “candidate” models of SR-TR coupling within CEA
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© Marc Isabelle 20049 They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation Four “candidate” models (all in Gibbons’ mode 2) Inputs for Phase II: four “candidate” models of SR-TR coupling within CEA (cont.)
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© Marc Isabelle 200410 They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation Every research environment provides researchers with incentives to invent (not necessarily based on patents) Motivations to invent, patent and transfer kn. & techs under each “candidate” model of SR-TR coupling
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© Marc Isabelle 200411 Perspectives on knowledge & technology transfer policy: a principal-agent framework They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation A dominant model: –Technology Transfer Office in charge of managing patent applications as well as knowledge and technology transfers to industrial firms –Financial rewards for researchers whose (patented) inventions are transferred ( 25-50 % of net licensing royalties) Impact of reward– inventiveness x – propensity to patent x – propensity to transfer ____________________ K & T transfer bottom line diluted (TTO’s responsibility) implicitly focal
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© Marc Isabelle 200412 Perspectives on knowledge & technology transfer policy: a principal-agent framework They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation But… (provided that researchers actually invent like they breathe) (cont.) PRO (principal) Researcher (agent) Asymmetries of information Incentives so that researcher behaves according to PRO’s objectives No monitoring of agent’s efforts to invent No monitoring of agent’s inventing results Wasteful incentives Efficient incentives
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© Marc Isabelle 200413 Conclusion Very preliminary work They invent (not patent) like they breathe: what are their incentives to do so? Short tales and lessons from researchers in a public research organisation Still largely empirical and inductive has to be consistently backed up with existing literature biases to control for (32 RDs all RDs CEA French PROs PROs) Many questions… no definite answer Phase II “Analysis” and Phase III “Synthesis” needed to consolidate and authenticate Phase I ’s results THANK YOU!
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