All Rights Reserved
AccessEcon LLC 2006, 2008.
Powered by MinhViet JSC

 
Eric T. Stuen
 
''Aggregate evidence of localized academic knowledge transfer in the U.S.''
( 2013, Vol. 33 No.2 )
 
 
Technology transfer and, more broadly, knowledge spillover from universities to industry has become increasingly studied as universities have become charged with driving local economic growth. This study offers several empirical improvements over prior efforts to measure the aggregate local effects of academic research. It uses counts of scientific publications and citations as more direct measures of academic knowledge than R&D spending. It makes use of panel data with greater breadth and depth: the sample covers all 105 U.S. metropolitan areas with significant academic research and spans 22 years. The positive local geographic association between university research and private-sector patenting found in prior studies is reaffirmed. There is some indication that this relationship strengthened in the last quarter of the sample, 1994-1999, suggesting that academic research was becoming more important to innovation in the 1990s. However, the volume of academic research was not found to have an effect on the rate of citations received by patents.
 
 
Keywords: technology transfer, knowledge spillover, research and development
JEL: O3 - Technological Change; Research and Development: General
 
Manuscript Received : Mar 21 2013 Manuscript Accepted : Jun 14 2013

  This abstract has been downloaded 1645 times                The Full PDF of this paper has been downloaded 160381 times