Technology & Innovation

An abundance of patents

September 17, 2009

Global

September 17, 2009

Global
Our Editors

The Economist Intelligence Unit

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The generation of patents is an important—although certainly not the only—pointer to the innovative impulse of a country’s IT sector. For this reason, it is a heavily weighted indicator in the R&D category of the Economist Intelligence Unit’s index model. It has also been a difficult indicator to measure, because until recently most countries’ patent applications could not be attributed to any particular sector. This year, however, we have been able to make use of newly available data from the European Patent Office (EPO) on IT-specific (computer and office machinery) patent applications filed with the EPO by firms in different countries. (Previously, we estimated IT-related patents using a measure of IT sector output as a share of GDP and applying that measure to total domestic patent applications.)
According to the EPO data, Canada is the most active generator of IT patent applications measured per 100 people. In last year’s index, Taiwan and South Korea were the two top-rated countries on patent activity, based on our estimates. Using the new EPO data, they now fall just behind Canada but remain the most prolific sources of IT patent applications in the Asia-Pacific region. The US, Japan and Germany file the largest number of IT patent applications in absolute terms.

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