International Co-Invention in Central and Eastern Europe: the Role of Foreign Direct Investment
journal contribution
posted on 2010-11-11, 00:00authored byMarco Vincenzi
Since the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989, International Co-Invention – characterized by patent
applications where at least one of the co-inventor is foreign – has boomed in Central and
Eastern Europe (CEE). A significant number of these patents arise out of various forms of R&D
collaboration or cooperation with multinational enterprises. We see this as part of a new
international division of labor, where incremental innovation, measured by the number of patent
applications at the European Patent Office (EPO) or at the US Patent and Trademark Office
(USPTO), is sharply rising in few low-wage countries besides CEE, namely China and India.
We explain this phenomenon for CEE, building on the concept of “idea gap” elaborated by
Romer (1993). In fact, we argue that under the influence of the Soviet Union, regional inventors
in Central and Eastern European countries were highly skilled and educated, but insufficiently
connected to centers of technological excellence in the Western World in order to reach their
potential of research productivity. Hence, large western multinational enterprises, which have
been investing heavily in the region since the fall of the Iron Curtain, worked as conduits by
hiring regional inventors at relatively low wages to match knowledge and skills from the East
with the complementary intellectual and financial assets in the West. According to our view,
FDI helped Central and Eastern European economies to narrow the “idea gap” that was
gnawing regional inventors in the early 1990s and gave the start to international co-invention.
In this paper, we show that in CEE internationally co-invented patents receive a higher number
of citations than those indigenously created and thus are of better quality, even at the most
stringent level of confidence, both for data from the EPO and from the USPTO. We also build an
econometric model to test whether FDI Stocks in CEE might cause, or at least be strongly
correlated with, the boom in international co-invention observed in CEE since the mid-1990s.
Our results show that there is a positive and very statistically significant correlation between the
boom of internationally co-invented patents and the sharp rise of Foreign Direct Investments,
while R&D Expenditure and Industrial Output seem to have much more explanatory power in
predicting the total count of patents attributed to Central and Eastern European inventors.