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Inventions and Their Commercial Exploitation in German Universities: Analyzing Determinants Among Academic Researchers

Teita Bijedić (), Simone Chlosta () and Arndt Werner ()
Additional contact information
Teita Bijedić: Institut für Mittelstandsforschung (IfM)
Simone Chlosta: RKW Kompetenzzentrum
Arndt Werner: University of Siegen

A chapter in New Perspectives in Technology Transfer, 2021, pp 11-30 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract Institutions of higher education are considered to be an important source of innovation and thereby a key driver of economic growth and development. Consequently, efforts are made to facilitate technology transfer from universities into the market. However, technology transfer in German universities does not seem to live up to its full potential: Using a sample of 7317 university scientists from 2013 covering 73 German universities, we find that while 18.5% of our scientists did in fact generate at least one invention, only 4.5% are actually engaged in commercialization activities. Based on this finding, we then analyze how individual, career-related, and institutional factors affect the innovation and knowledge transfer activities of male and female academics to understand why the vast majority of inventions remains commercially unexploited. We show that gender differences as well as career and human capital related factors (e.g., scope of employment, professional experience, and leadership position) affect innovation transfer activities. For example, while women generate fewer inventions than men, full-time employed researchers with professional experience outside of academia holding a leadership position generate more inventions and show partly higher exploitation activities than the average scientist. We also find positive effects of institutional factors on innovation transfer activities: using the services of patenting agencies, for example, not only leads to the generation of inventions but also to stating intellectual property rights and commercially exploiting these inventions.

Keywords: Academic entrepreneurship; Gender; Commercial exploitation; Institutional context (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2021
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DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-61477-5_2

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