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INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS IN R&D AND INNOVATION Ádám Török Secretary General, Hungarian Academy of Sciences.

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Presentation on theme: "INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS IN R&D AND INNOVATION Ádám Török Secretary General, Hungarian Academy of Sciences."— Presentation transcript:

1 INTERNATIONAL COMPETITIVENESS IN R&D AND INNOVATION Ádám Török Secretary General, Hungarian Academy of Sciences

2 Why is innovation important to the competitive performance of the economy? „middle income trap” Continuous and significant FDI inflows, but no in- depth structural change in industry („upgrading” missing) Strengthen the National Innovation System (NIS) Connection between NIS and firms

3 The Global Competitiveness Index 2014-2015 (WEF) Source: World Economic Forum, 2014.

4 International competitiveness in innovation Research and development (R&D) - innovation Krugman (1994) – against the idea of perceiving competitiveness at the macro level The Krugman-debate: is international trade a cooperative or a non- cooperative game? Supply-side and demand-side approaches Product competitiveness – competitiveness of R&D Scientific excellence Academic performance Success in generating funding

5 R&D and Innovation in the European Union Measure the international competitiveness of R&D and innovation – GERD/GDP – BERD/GDP Lisbon Agenda: 3% (2010: 1,9%) – caveats: Rapidly deteriorating fiscal situation Economic slowdown EU2020: 3% (Hungary: 1,8% - 2020) New methods of measurement? European Innovation Scoreboard Elements of the synthetic indicators of innovation performance Good proxy of a competitiveness ranking

6 European Innovation Scoreboard (2014) Source: Innovation Union Scoreboard, 2015.

7 GERD as a percentage of GDP (2013, %) Source: OECD MSTI, 2015.

8 GERD as a percentage of GDP (2000-2013, %) Source: OECD MSTI, 2015.

9 BERD as a percentage of GDP (2013, %) Source: OECD MSTI, 2015.

10 BERD as a percentage of GDP (2000-2013, %) Source: OECD MSTI, 2015.

11 European Paradox „European Paradox” the EU lag behind the US (plus South Korea and Japan) in terms of R&D and innovation EU spends relatively much on science and R&D, but it only has a limited effect on increasing competitiveness – output appears more in publications than in patents GERD/GDP varied between 0,39% (Romania) and 3,31% (Finland) (2013) Calderini et al. (2007) – patenting and publishing results are often alternatives to each other

12 Number of Citable Documents (articles, reviews and conference papers) (2013) Source: Scimago, 2015.

13 Total patent applications (direct and PCT nationat phase entries) - (2000-2013) Source: WIPO, http://ipstats.wipo.int/ipstatv2/ipstableval, 2015.

14 Total patent applications (direct and PCT nationat phase entries) - CEECs (2000-2013) Source: WIPO, http://ipstats.wipo.int/ipstatv2/ipstableval, 2015.

15 Reasons Underlying the Lag Strong US dominance in international higher education Ranking lists of universities (ARWU, THES, QS) – a complex problem of competitiveness analysis 1. Johns Hopkins University (2013: $2 168 568 000), 2. University of Michigan (2013: $1 375 117 000), …. 7. Harvard (2013: $1 012 766 000) English as a lingua franca US – one national market of scientific output Institutional differences

16 10 years of the Hungarian innovation system State institutions – various sectorial interest groups or organizations, corporate actors Hungarian Academy of Sciences New or innovate R&D policies New application systems (e.g. Lendület Program) Specific form of „European Paradox” BERD/GDP – improved Certain elements of R&D and Innovation institutions were modernized.

17 THANK YOU FOR YOUR KIND ATTENTION!


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