Drivers of national innovation in transition: Evidence from a panel of Eastern European countries
Drivers of national innovation in transition: Evidence from a panel of Eastern European countries
Innovation plays a crucial role in determining today’s economic growth patterns. But what enables some countries to innovate more than others? This study attempts to answer this question by analyzing in premiere a panel of sixteen Eastern European transition countries. It provides a detailed description of innovation identifying regional differences in terms of historical heritage, technological specialization, commitments and main actors involved in this process, before and after the fall of communism. Secondly, it explores empirically the main drivers of their innovative output, proxied by patents, using a variety of econometric techniques and control variables. The results confirm the crucial role of universities and existing national knowledge base complemented by R&D commitments from both public and private sources. Policy measures, such as intellectual property rights protection or a favorable business climate, increase significantly the propensity to patent, while measures of transitional downturn and industrial restructuring diminish it. Finally, globalization contributes to developing new innovations in these countries through inflows of foreign investment and trade.
845-860
Krammer, Marius
24ce872e-5044-4846-bb35-88e12c74c854
9 September 2009
Krammer, Marius
24ce872e-5044-4846-bb35-88e12c74c854
Krammer, Marius
(2009)
Drivers of national innovation in transition: Evidence from a panel of Eastern European countries.
Research Policy, 38 (5), .
(doi:10.1016/j.respol.2009.01.022).
Abstract
Innovation plays a crucial role in determining today’s economic growth patterns. But what enables some countries to innovate more than others? This study attempts to answer this question by analyzing in premiere a panel of sixteen Eastern European transition countries. It provides a detailed description of innovation identifying regional differences in terms of historical heritage, technological specialization, commitments and main actors involved in this process, before and after the fall of communism. Secondly, it explores empirically the main drivers of their innovative output, proxied by patents, using a variety of econometric techniques and control variables. The results confirm the crucial role of universities and existing national knowledge base complemented by R&D commitments from both public and private sources. Policy measures, such as intellectual property rights protection or a favorable business climate, increase significantly the propensity to patent, while measures of transitional downturn and industrial restructuring diminish it. Finally, globalization contributes to developing new innovations in these countries through inflows of foreign investment and trade.
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Accepted/In Press date: 20 January 2009
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 March 2009
Published date: 9 September 2009
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Local EPrints ID: 497713
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497713
PURE UUID: ea6d6687-6960-4434-97b5-33d60c3658d6
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Date deposited: 29 Jan 2025 18:41
Last modified: 01 Feb 2025 03:19
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Marius Krammer
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