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Major Current Trends in Innovation: The OECD Science, Technology and Industry Outlook 2014 Dominique Guellec Head, Country Studies and Outlook Division (DSTI/CSO) OECD Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation OECD STI Outlook: 20-year tradition • “What’s new in the field of science, technology and innovation policy? “ • International review of key recent trends in STI for the STI policy community and analysts • Based on latest STI policy information and indicators • OECD Flagship publication 2 More than a book… An infrastructure for knowledge sharing and building Analytical work by CSTP WP (e.g. TIP/RIHR) OECD Committees (e.g. CIIE) OECD Directorates (EDU, STD, CFE) Country reviews Measurement work 3 The three components of the STI Outlook 2014 OVERALL STI PERFORMANCE AND POLICY TRENDS POLICY PROFILES COUNTRY PROFILES 4 European Union: Benchmarking performance (1) Normalised index of performance relative to the median values in the OECD area (Index median = 100) Top/Bottom 5 OECD values Middle range of OECD values OECD median EU28 a. Competences and capacity to innovate Universities and public research R&D and innovation in firms Innovative entrepreneurship 200 Top half OECD 150 100 Bottom half OECD 50 0 5 European Union: Benchmarking performance (2) Normalised index of performance relative to the median values in the OECD area (Index median = 100) b. Interactions and skills for innovation ICT and Internet infrastructures Networks, clusters and transfers Skills for innovation 200 Top half OECD 150 100 Bottom half OECD 50 0 6 EU policy mix: self-assessment Most relevant instruments of public funding of business R&D Country self-assessment index (9= high and increasing relevance, to 0= not used) OECD median EU28 10 Indirect funding Direct funding 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Competitive Repayable grants advances Debt financing Equity financing Technology Innovation consulting vouchers Tax Tax incentives incentives on for R&D IP gains 7 Technological orientation Revealed technology advantage in selected fields, 2009-11 Index based on PCT patent applications OECD median EU28 BRIICS EU28 (2000-03) 2.0 36.8 11.9 8.1 % of PCT patent applications filed by universities and PRIs 1.5 Revealed technology advantage in selected fields, 2009-11 1.0 0.5 0.0 Bio- and nanotechnologies ICT Environment-related technologies 8 Selected key messages OVERALL STI PERFORMANCE AND POLICY TRENDS POLICY PROFILES 9 Innovation in the crisis Annual growth rate of GDP and GERD, constant prices, 1993-2013 and projections to 2014 and 2015 Source: OECD Economic Outlook no95 Database, May 2014; OECD Main Science and Technology Indicators MSTI database, June 2014. 10 A changing global R&D landscape GERD, million USD 2005 PPP, 2000-12 and projections to 2024 Source: OECD estimates based on OECD MSTI database, June 2014. 11 Diverging Europe National R&D spending targets and gap with current levels of GERD intensity, % of GDP, 2014 Source: OECD estimates based on OECD MSTI database, June 2014. 12 Budgets are levelling off or receding… Public R&D budgets (GBAORD), as % of GDP, 2013 compared to 2011 Source: OECD estimates based on OECD MSTI database, June 2014. 13 Public research funding: Striving for Excellence Government funds a large share of publicly performed R&D (USD 400 bn in 2012) (2010: 71% of HERD and 93% of GOVERD in the OECD ) GOVERD 100% 90% 80% 70% HERD 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% % GOVERD financed by government Source: OECD Research and Development Database, 2013 Source: OECD Research and Development Database, 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986 1985 1984 1983 1982 1981 0% % HERD financed by government 15 Promoting Research Excellence: New Approaches to Funding Research funding mechanisms Institutional core funding Basic funding guaranteed mid- to long-term Not dependent on applications Various means of assigning budgets, including performancebased elements REI funding Organised in programmes Focus on exceptional research quality System-level perspective (i.e. national science landscape) Frequent reference to socio-demographic issues Project funding Time-bound Application-based Competitively organised Outcome-oriented 16 Performance-based funding for public research in tertiary education institutions • Scope: – Experts commissioned to investigate models, indicators and impacts – Questionnaire survey completed by 13 countries • Key findings: – – – – – – – – – Most schemes introduced since 2000 Main rationale: raise quality of research; but also others Assessments commonly used for several rounds of annual funding Open disclosure of processes and results in most countries Similarities in indicators used: 3rd party income, publications, degree completions; differences in combinations and weighting, reliance on quantitative indicators and peer review, and use of additional indicators Differences in budget impacts of schemes: while difficult to compare across countries, annual block funding affected ranges from 6% to 75% Differences in the involvement of HEIs in designing schemes Few formal evaluations of schemes – evidence suggests positive effects on research outputs and research management Negative and unintended consequences also highlighted: e.g. narrowing of research focus on publications targeted at certain journals Performance-based funding for public research in tertiary education institutions (2010) For further reading… www.oecd.org/sti/outlook www.innovationpolicyplatform.org 19