Publications
-
List item
PDF The 2006 Survey on R&D Investment Business Trends
This is the second survey on R&D investment business trends. It provides new insights into company expectations about future R&D… Show more investments and their motivations to invest in research. The results are drawn from 110 responses out of the 700 of the European companies appearing in the 2005 EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard. The responding companies are responsible for a total global R&D investment of almost €25 billion, constituting a considerable share (24.3%) of the total R&D investment by the European Scoreboard companies. Show less
-
-
List item
PDF The 2005 Survey on R&D Investment Business Trends
Increasing and improving Research and Development (R&D) investment in Europe is at the heart of the EU's Lisbon Strategy. However,… Show more information permitting consistent comparisons, across the EU and across different sectors, of current and prospective trends in R&D investment practices of firms is presently not available. In order to support policy-makers in this field and monitor progress towards the Lisbon targets, the present survey gathers information, at a European level, on factors and issues which surround and influence R&D investment in companies. The survey is also a valuable source of information for companies and analysts in order to assess trends at corporate level. Introduction This pilot survey on R&D investment business trends provides new insights into company expectations about future R&D investments and their motivations to invest in research. The main results are as follows: Companies expect their global investments in R&D to grow by around 5 % p.a. for the next three years. These expectations reflect the dominance in the sample of the companies in pharmaceuticals & biotechnology and chemicals, which together account for almost 60 % of the total R&D investment of all companies in the sample. The incentives to increase R&D investment most often cited in the responses are: changes in market demand for new products and services, changes in technological opportunities, and changes in company turnover or profit. Changes in the availability and labour costs of researchers are the least often cited incentives for increasing R&D investment. Own funds are by far the principal source for financing the company's R&D, followed by tax incentives and public grants. Companies outsource an average of 18 % of their R&D investment. Around two thirds of this goes to other companies and one third to public research organisations. The sector which outsources most of its R&D is pharmaceuticals and biotechnology (25%), and the least is IT hardware (5%). The most important factors when deciding where to locate R&D are: market access, high availability of researchers, access to specialised R&D knowledge and results, macroeconomic and political stability, and R&D cooperation opportunities. The often mentioned labour costs of researchers seem to be less significant. The survey confirms the view that companies continue to prefer to locate R&D in their home-country. Therefore, the top locations for R&D activity in Europe continue to be Germany, the United Kingdom and France. Outside the EU, the US remained by far the most attractive place for locating R&D activity, followed by China and India. New products resulting from R&D are mainly exploited by the company itself. The results are drawn from the responses received from 449 companies covering ten sectors: automobiles & parts, chemicals, electronic & electrical equipment, engineering & machinery, food producers & processors, health, IT hardware, pharmaceuticals & biotechnology, steel & other metals and support services. Taken together, the 449 responding companies are responsible for a total global R&D investment of almost €30 billion, which is a significant share of European business investment in R&D. Show less
-
List item
PDF The 2005 EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard
The 2005 EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard lists the Research and Development investment of the top 700 EU and the… Show more top 700 non-EU corporate R&D investors, based on annual audited company consolidated reports and accounts. It also provides information on other economic and financial data of the companies. Show less
-
List item
PDF The 2004 EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard
This first EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard lists the research investments of the top 500 EU and top 500 non-EU… Show more corporate R&D investors, calculated at the consolidated group level (i.e. companies whose ultimate parent is registered either inside or outside the EU), based on annual audited company reports and accounts published up to 31 July 2004. Show less
-
List item
PDF Europe’s Technology Sovereignty and the Role of Knowledge Diffusion in Global Value Chains
The rise of China as the ‘workshop of the world’, combined with experiences with supply shortages during the COVID-19 pandemic,… Show more have led to a re-assessment in recent years of the dependencies of countries on foreign sources of technology. This study seeks to contribute to this discussion by analysing technology dependency in a global value-chain framework. We employ input-output and R&D investment data to assess how dependency on imported R&D inputs has developed over the last decade. Our results indicate that there has been no general trend towards greater technological dependency on foreign R&D. In the last decade, the share of imported R&D in total R&D increased in around half of the countries in the analysis and remained unchanged in the United States and in the EU-27. Both the EU-27 and United States show comparable levels of dependency on foreign sources of technology. At industry level, low-tech sectors revealed the highest rates of dependency on foreign sources of technology. The data also confirm that dependency on China for imported R&D has at least doubled in most countries over the last decade. China, in contrast, was able to reduce its own dependence on foreign sources of technology in the past decade dependency due to fast-growing domestic R&D investments. In addition, regional integration in technology flows between Asian countries is much greater today than it was 10 years ago. Show less