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1992 | Book

The Technological Specialization of Advanced Countries

A Report to the EEC on International Science and Technology Activities

Authors: Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta

Publisher: Springer Netherlands

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About this book

Advanced countries have shown an increasing convergence in their economic performance and technological intensity, with a relative decline of the position of the United States and the emergence of the European and Japanese economies. The Technological Specialization of Advanced Countries moves beyond aggregate patterns and examines the sectoral structure of technological activities, the process of specialization, and the impact on national performance.
Indicators of technology and of scientific activity are examined together with other economic and R & D data, providing a wealth of empirical evidence on the activities, and areas of strength and weakness of individual countries. The amount of disaggregated data provided, and the assessment offered on the state of art in science and technology indicators, make The Technological Specialization of Advanced Countries an important reference work.
A description of the fields of national effort is provided and a special study is devoted to the fields of greater innovative dynamism where patenting has grown most rapidly. Over time, countries have concentrated their technological efforts in the fields of their greater strength, under the pressure of increasing international competition and the proprietary nature of know how. Conversely, in science there has generally been a decrease in the degree of specialization, with countries entering new fields of research, taking advantage of the open flow of scientific knowledge.
For science and technology policy, the findings of The Technological Specialization of Advanced Countries suggest that national efforts should be combined with the growing international integration. The aims of maintaining established areas of strength and of developing new specializations in emerging fields should be balanced, and a more selective policy at the sectoral level is suggested.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Introduction and Summary
Abstract
This book investigates the structure and the changes over time of the technological specialization of advanced countries. Innovation is generally regarded as one of the key determinants of national economic performance and competitiveness. During the 1980s much attention was devoted to understanding its dynamics and impact. An increasing amount of studies have been devoted to the aggregate quantity of resources devoted to Science and Technology (S&T). However, less attention has been paid to a systematic analysis of national activities at the sectoral level. One stream of studies has pointed out that technological change is highly diversified across sectors and countries,1 suggesting that the importance of the innovations of each country differ strongly according to their sectoral specialization. We shall here explore the relationship between general tendencies in the S&T system on the one hand and national patterns of sectoral specialization on the other.
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Chapter 2. Structural Change and International Strategies in Science and Technology
Abstract
The development and diffusion of new technologies is a major aspect of the current transformations in advanced countries. Innovation in products, processes and forms of organization is a critical factor for greater productivity, competitiveness, growth and employment, as indicated by a large number of theoretical and empirical analyses.1
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Chapter 3. An Overview of Scientific and Technological Activities in the Advanced Countries
Abstract
The previous Chapters have outlined the processes of growing international competition and cooperation which are transforming the structure, performance and hierarchy of S&T activities in the advanced countries. The position of individual countries in these processes varies widely, both the strategies they pursue and the results they achieve being strongly influenced by the quantity, nature, and intensity of the technological knowledge and skills accumulated in the past. The differences across countries require a quantitative investigation of the characteristics shown by their innovative activities. This is the basis for comparison of national performances and the technology policies developed as a response to the competitive challenges in international markets.
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Chapter 4. Sectoral Strengths and Weaknesses of Advanced Countries in Different Patent Institutions
Abstract
The assessment of national capabilities and performance in specific fields of technology is becoming increasingly important for the policy making of both governments and firms. The previous Chapter shows that in all countries the technological effort, measured both by input indicators such as R&D and by output indicators such as patents, has grown over the last decade. A tendency towards an increasing internationalization of technological activities has also been identified. Moving beyond the aggregate picture of science and technology (S&T) activities, we examine in this and in the following Chapters the sectoral patterns of national specialization in technology, using patent data as an indicator. This evidence will then be matched in Chapter 7 with a parallel analysis on the sectoral patterns of scientific specialization, using bibliometric indicators.
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Chapter 5. Changes over Time and Impact of Patenting Activity: The Sectoral Distribution of Patent Counts and Patent Citations in the US
Abstract
In the previous Chapter we have examined the pattern of specialization of advanced countries across technological fields described by IPC classes, on the basis of patenting in the US, at the EPO, in West Germany and France. The consistency shown by most countries in their profiles of specialization emerging from patents registered in different foreign institutions is documented for the first time and the findings add new depth to our undestanding of the areas of strength and weakness of major countries.
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Chapter 6. National Technological Specialization and Sectoral Growth Rates in Patenting
Abstract
The previous two Chapters have mapped the different countries’ sectoral strengths and weaknesses in technological activity by using patent data as an indicator. We have already stressed that the quality of individual patents is highly skewed, and that while some have a dramatic economic impact, many patents never become actual innovations. In the previous Chapter we also considered an indicator of their impact, i.e. patent citations, and significant cross-country differences were shown to exist in the average impact of patented inventions at the aggregate level. At the sectoral level, however, a strong positive correlation emerged between the specialization profiles measured on the number of patents and of the citations received.
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Chapter 7. Sectoral Strengths and Weaknesses of Advanced Countries in Science
Abstract
In the previous Chapters the sectoral specialization of technological activities of advanced countries is investigated by means of patent-based indicators. In this Chapter, the same approach will be followed in the analysis of the sectoral strengths and weaknesses of national scientific activities; the main indicators used to describe the countries’ specialization will be publications and citations in the scientific literature. The interest of a comparison between the sectoral patterns of specialization in science and technology lies in the complex interrelations existing between the research activities of more fundamental nature taking place in institutions (universities, public and private research laboratories, etc.) devoted to the advancement of science on the one hand, and the research and development activities taking place in firms and other institutions (applied research laboratories, technical universities, etc.) focusing on technological innovation on the other.
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Chapter 8. Degree of Specialization and Size of National Scientific and Technological Activities
Abstract
In the previous four Chapters the specialization profiles of advanced countries have been identified according to both technology and science indicators. The mapping of sectoral strengths and weaknesses, however, also requires a description of how concentrated (or spread out) national science and technology activities are across fields. Beyond analysis at the sectoral level, in fact, the resulting aggregate tendencies, and differences existing among countries, should be explored. This Chapter examines the extent to which countries focus their efforts in a few areas of science and technology, or distribute their resources over many different fields. This analysis qualifies the study of national sectoral specialization developed in the previous Chapters, and constitutes an original contribution of this report.
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Chapter 9. The Inter-Industry Structure of Technological Specialization
Abstract
Three aspects of national technological specialization were shown in the previous Chapter: i) the existence of substantial differences among countries in the degreee of specialization, ii) the general increase over the 1980s, and iii) the national specificities, with the degrees of specialization that have grown faster in some countries, and decreased in a few others. We have not yet, however, taken into account the influence of individual technological sectors on the general degree of specialization. Obviously, significant differences exist across sectors and over time on the distribution of inventions by country. In some technological fields, the majority of countries have an innovative activity broadly proportional to their aggregate S&T size, while other fields can be deeply affected by the strengths (or weaknesses) of particular countries. Within each sector, the distribution across countries of technological activities may change over time, leading to a more even distribution of innovations, or to greater concentration in a few countries. These questions, which are strictly related to the analysis of the degree of specialization carried out in the previous Chapter, are addressed in this Chapter.1
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Chapter 10. The Patterns and Impact of Technological Specialization
Abstract
The findings of the previous Chapters have described the process of specialization in science and technology in advanced countries. Quantitative data on several S&T indicators and databases have been used to examine the trends of the 1970s and 1980s at national and at sectoral level. This Chapter will pull together and summarize the different threads of the analysis and go on to examine the relationship between specialization and national performance. After the analysis in the previous Chapters of the specialization profiles of advanced countries in technology and science and the data provided on the degree of specialization in countries and sectors, the concluding questions to be addressed focus on the different national patterns of technological specialization and on the impact they have on national performance. In particular, two issues will be examined:
i)
The first question is: how can the similarities and differences in national patterns of technological activity be defined? Are there common patterns across countries emerging from the comparison of national sectoral specialization?
 
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Chapter 11. Conclusions
Abstract
Technology is widely regarded as a key factor contributing to economic growth and international competitiveness. The extent of its contribution depends on the way countries are able to develop, select, acquire, and disseminate know how through their national systems of innovation. This book has focused on the sectoral structure of national technological activities and on the process of specialization. Our analysis should be seen in the context of the debate on the transformation of advanced economies, on their convergence in terms of aggregate indicators and industrial structures, and on their changing relative positions. It documents the convergence of advanced countries in terms of their S&T intensity, and the growing concentration of national efforts in selected fields of international excellence.
Daniele Archibugi, Mario Pianta
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
The Technological Specialization of Advanced Countries
Authors
Daniele Archibugi
Mario Pianta
Copyright Year
1992
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Electronic ISBN
978-94-015-7999-5
Print ISBN
978-94-015-8001-4
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-015-7999-5