Abstract

Recently, several studies using various methods for analysis have tried to evaluate factors affecting knowledge creation activity, but few analyses quantitatively account for the impact that economic determinants have on them. This paper introduces a non-parametric method to structurally analyze changes in information and communication technology (ICT) patenting trends as representative outcomes of knowledge creation activity with economic indicators. For this, the authors established a symmetric model that enables several economic contributors to be decomposed through the perspective of ICTs’ research and development (R&D) performance, industrial change, and overall manufacturing growth. Additionally, an empirical analysis of some countries from 2001 to 2009 was conducted through this model. This paper found that all countries except the United States experienced an increase of 10.5–267.4% in ICT patent applications, despite fluctuations in the time series. It is interesting that the changes in ICT patenting of each country generally have a negative relationship with the intensity of each country’s patent protection system. Positive determinants include ICT R&D productivity and overall manufacturing growth, while ICT industrial change is a negative determinant in almost all countries. This paper emphasizes that each country needs to design strategic plans for effective ICT innovation. In particular, ICT innovation activities need to be promoted by increasing ICT R&D investment and developing the ICT industry, since ICT R&D intensity and ICT industrial change generally have a low contribution to ICT patenting.

Highlights

  • The innovation policies of major developed countries generally focus on establishing a mission-driven innovative ecosystem which is related to business development and job creation due to recent economic recession trends

  • Many academic papers have used patents as a proxy to represent the size of research and development (R&D) outcomes, technological innovation and knowledge creation [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]

  • According to WIPO (2009) [60], the growth rate of PCT applications is considerably lower than in the past after the dot-com bubble collapse, year of 2000

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Summary

Introduction

The innovation policies of major developed countries generally focus on establishing a mission-driven innovative ecosystem which is related to business development and job creation due to recent economic recession trends. This ecosystem’s creation is emphasized to enhance the efficiency and outcome quality in research and development (R&D) through performance evaluation management and inspection reinforcement, rather than new investment expansion. Symmetry 2017, 9, 251 information regarding the technology itself, the information in the patent document can be widely considered to be an index representing the size of technological activity and the invention process [1,2,3]. Many academic papers have used patents as a proxy to represent the size of R&D outcomes (in a narrow sense), technological innovation and knowledge creation (in an extended meaning) [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11]

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