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Knowledge flows between science and industry and how to measure them

Josefine Diekhof, Verena Eckl, Bastian Krieger, Georg Licht, Thu-Van Nguyen, Bettina Peters (bettina.peters@zew.de), Christian Rammer and Gero Stenke

No 9/2019, ZEW policy briefs from ZEW - Leibniz Centre for European Economic Research

Abstract: The exchange of knowledge between science and industry has been a focus of innovation research and policy for many decades. New developments in the way technologies are generated, shared, and transferred into new products, services, and business models are currently re-emphasising science-industry interactions. Main drivers are the emergence of open innovation models, the increased internationalisation of innovation processes, the rise of digital platforms, new modes of governance in public research, and the enlarged role of disruptive innovations. At the same time, the measurement of knowledge flows is still limited, and indicators on recent trends in science-industry interaction are lacking. This limits innovation policy in monitoring changes and addressing challenges. A conference in October 2019 in Berlin brought together industry representatives, researchers, and policy makers to discuss these developments and how the measurement of science-industry links could be improved. This policy brief summarises key trends in science-industry collaborations, presents existing indicators and discusses ways to improve our indicator system on knowledge flows between science and industry in order to better inform policy.

Date: 2019
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ino, nep-knm, nep-pay and nep-sbm
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https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/213296/1/1687840547.pdf (application/pdf)

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