Assessment of innovation potential for Russian regions

Innovation development is declared as one of the key objectives of social and economic policy in Russia. The purpose of the work was to identify regions with the highest innovation capacity and developed regional innovation system, where support of innovation activities would be the most effective....

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Main Author: Zemtsov, Stepan
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Louvain-la-Neuve: European Regional Science Association (ERSA) 2014
Subjects:
R12
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10419/124232
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spelling ftzbwkiel:oai:econstor.eu:10419/124232 2023-05-15T15:54:55+02:00 Assessment of innovation potential for Russian regions Zemtsov, Stepan 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/10419/124232 eng eng Louvain-la-Neuve: European Regional Science Association (ERSA) Series: 54th Congress of the European Regional Science Association: "Regional development & globalisation: Best practices", 26-29 August 2014, St. Petersburg, Russia gbv-ppn:863201881 http://hdl.handle.net/10419/124232 RePEc:wiw:wiwrsa:ERSA14p138 http://www.econstor.eu/dspace/Nutzungsbedingungen ddc:330 R12 Innovation potential regions development doc-type:conferenceObject 2014 ftzbwkiel 2020-10-01T11:25:28Z Innovation development is declared as one of the key objectives of social and economic policy in Russia. The purpose of the work was to identify regions with the highest innovation capacity and developed regional innovation system, where support of innovation activities would be the most effective. The hypothesis was that innovation capacity can be expressed as a probability function, which dependent on density and concentration of innovators and intensity of their interaction. Taking in account the hypothesis, gravity model of patent activity per capita was used to estimate creative potential of Russian regions. Patent activity in Russia declined significantly from 60000 granted patents in 1989 to 22500 in 2012. The largest cities and closed science cities are still the sources of new technologies, but activity in the Moscow core decreased from 230 to 30 patents / 100 thousand residents in 1999. Patents are not innovations in the full sense of the term, because they may not be implemented. The official Russian statistics is not perfect because of optionality of statistical forms filling. Most of approaches for capacity assessment in Russia based on index compilation and have several disadvantages: correlation between indicators, non-normal distribution of indicators, etc. Considering the disadvantages the author collected a database of 38 indicators of innovation sphere, and conducted normal distribution, correlation and factor analyses. The indicators of the first factor are: estimation of economic-geographical position; percentage of residents in cities with population more than 200 thousand people (%); percentage of people with a higher education (%), number of university students per 10 thousand people; percentage of employees in R & D sector in total employment (%); number of registered patents per 1000 employees; percentage of organizations with a website (%). Six groups of regions were identified: ?innovation core' (index = 1 ? 0.7); ?highly developed' (0.7 ? 0.6); ?regions with a strong science sector' (0.6 ? 0.5); ?regions of basic sectors of the economy' (0.5 ? 0.4); ?regions with limited potential' (0.4 ? 0.3); and ?peripheral regions' (less than 0.3). To prove the correctness of the chosen indicators probit-regression between the index and international PCT-applications was made. The regression results are compared with the results for other existing indexes. The probability of new technology generation in Moscow among all regions close to 1, and it is close to zero in Chukotka. The work has confirmed the hypothesis of high concentration of potential in major agglomerations and research centres. Conference Object Chukotka EconStor (German National Library of Economics, ZBW)
institution Open Polar
collection EconStor (German National Library of Economics, ZBW)
op_collection_id ftzbwkiel
language English
topic ddc:330
R12
Innovation
potential
regions
development
spellingShingle ddc:330
R12
Innovation
potential
regions
development
Zemtsov, Stepan
Assessment of innovation potential for Russian regions
topic_facet ddc:330
R12
Innovation
potential
regions
development
description Innovation development is declared as one of the key objectives of social and economic policy in Russia. The purpose of the work was to identify regions with the highest innovation capacity and developed regional innovation system, where support of innovation activities would be the most effective. The hypothesis was that innovation capacity can be expressed as a probability function, which dependent on density and concentration of innovators and intensity of their interaction. Taking in account the hypothesis, gravity model of patent activity per capita was used to estimate creative potential of Russian regions. Patent activity in Russia declined significantly from 60000 granted patents in 1989 to 22500 in 2012. The largest cities and closed science cities are still the sources of new technologies, but activity in the Moscow core decreased from 230 to 30 patents / 100 thousand residents in 1999. Patents are not innovations in the full sense of the term, because they may not be implemented. The official Russian statistics is not perfect because of optionality of statistical forms filling. Most of approaches for capacity assessment in Russia based on index compilation and have several disadvantages: correlation between indicators, non-normal distribution of indicators, etc. Considering the disadvantages the author collected a database of 38 indicators of innovation sphere, and conducted normal distribution, correlation and factor analyses. The indicators of the first factor are: estimation of economic-geographical position; percentage of residents in cities with population more than 200 thousand people (%); percentage of people with a higher education (%), number of university students per 10 thousand people; percentage of employees in R & D sector in total employment (%); number of registered patents per 1000 employees; percentage of organizations with a website (%). Six groups of regions were identified: ?innovation core' (index = 1 ? 0.7); ?highly developed' (0.7 ? 0.6); ?regions with a strong science sector' (0.6 ? 0.5); ?regions of basic sectors of the economy' (0.5 ? 0.4); ?regions with limited potential' (0.4 ? 0.3); and ?peripheral regions' (less than 0.3). To prove the correctness of the chosen indicators probit-regression between the index and international PCT-applications was made. The regression results are compared with the results for other existing indexes. The probability of new technology generation in Moscow among all regions close to 1, and it is close to zero in Chukotka. The work has confirmed the hypothesis of high concentration of potential in major agglomerations and research centres.
format Conference Object
author Zemtsov, Stepan
author_facet Zemtsov, Stepan
author_sort Zemtsov, Stepan
title Assessment of innovation potential for Russian regions
title_short Assessment of innovation potential for Russian regions
title_full Assessment of innovation potential for Russian regions
title_fullStr Assessment of innovation potential for Russian regions
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of innovation potential for Russian regions
title_sort assessment of innovation potential for russian regions
publisher Louvain-la-Neuve: European Regional Science Association (ERSA)
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10419/124232
genre Chukotka
genre_facet Chukotka
op_relation Series: 54th Congress of the European Regional Science Association: "Regional development & globalisation: Best practices", 26-29 August 2014, St. Petersburg, Russia
gbv-ppn:863201881
http://hdl.handle.net/10419/124232
RePEc:wiw:wiwrsa:ERSA14p138
op_rights http://www.econstor.eu/dspace/Nutzungsbedingungen
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