Documentos de trabajo
Empirical evidence on R&D targeting and transitions
Fecha
2015-04Autor
Álvarez Espinoza, Roberto
Bravo Ortega, Claudio
Poniachik Calderón, Dan
Institución
Resumen
Over the last five decades a growing number of governments in developed
and developing countries have implemented targeting policies to increase
the R&D to GDP ratio. However, until now there have been few attempts
either to evaluate the effectiveness of these policy efforts or to identify the
characteristics of substantial, country-level R&D-intensity increases. In this
paper we address both of those issues. First, we compile information about
the R&D targeting goals for 53 countries, finding that most of them have
failed to fulfill their self-imposed targets. Second, and complementarily, we
study episodes of substantial acceleration in R&D expenditure, using a
larger longitudinal dataset of 62 countries between 1960 and 2007. We find
that transitions to higher levels of R&D-intensity are relatively infrequent
phenomenon. These transitions are positively correlated with higher income
levels, knowledge production variables (patents and scientific publications),
intellectual property rights, technological exports, and terms of trade. We
also find that the private sector is a main driver of R&D expenditure
increases