Does South African research output promote innovation?

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Inglesi-Lotz, Roula
Pouris, Anastassios

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Academy of Science of South Africa

Abstract

Research and development (R&D) activities that lead to innovation can contribute highly to a country’s economic growth and development. However, research output can be expressed in different forms, such as research publications and patents. Patents are considered to be closer to implemented innovation than are research publications, but research publications improve human capital and propose innovative solutions that can lead to patenting activities. So although they are two different outcomes, publications and patents can work in synergy. A recently published article entitled ‘Patents vs publications and R&D: Three sides of the same coin? Panel Smooth Transition Regression (PSTR) for OECD and BRICS countries’ in the journal Applied Economics, identified the existence of research thresholds beyond which countries can move in the next stage and increase their number of patents. The concept tested was that a minimum number of publications (as a proxy to research capacity) should be reached before a country or a region can engage in patenting activities that will eventually promote higher innovation and consequently economic growth. In that paper, we investigated the existence of thresholds in the OECD and the BRICS countries and found that the threshold of publications before patenting activity started was 11 113 for the whole sample, 9038 for the OECD countries and 9945 for the BRICS countries.

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Keywords

Publications, Patents, Technology, Research and development (R&D)

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Inglesi-Lotz R, Pouris A. Does South African research output promote innovation? South African Journal of Science. 2018;114(9/10), Art. #a0286, 3 pages. https://DOI.org/10.17159/sajs.2018/a0286.