Inventions and patenting in Africa: Empirical trends from 1970 to 2010
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2020

Economic development is increasingly dependent upon on utilizing new knowledge to innovate and create value, even in traditional industries and in low-income countries. This analysis uses evidence on patent families to assess innovation activity throughout sub-Saharan Africa. We find patent activity in sub-Saharan Africa-both by African inventors and by foreign inventors-is comparable to similar regions around the world, when conditioned on economic size. Patent filings in Africa have grown, particularly, since the mid-1990s, but at different rates within different African jurisdictions. Types of technologies being patented in Africa have remained stable over 30 years, with most in pharmaceuticals, chemistry, biotechnology, and engineering. The majority of patent filings in Africa are from Europe, the United States, and other high income countries. Yet, in South Africa, between 15% and 20% of patent filings are by residents of South Africa, and 3% are from other developing and emerging economies. Only a small share of inventions globally are made in sub-Saharan Africa, but for those inventions that do arise in Africa, foreign filings are made widely outside of Africa.

international technology transfer

patent offices

intellectual property rights

patent families

Africa

Författare

Gregory Graff

Colorado State University

University of Minnesota

Chalmers, Teknikens ekonomi och organisation, Entrepreneurship and Strategy

Philip G. Pardey

University of Minnesota

Journal of World Intellectual Property

1422-2213 (ISSN) 1747-1796 (eISSN)

Vol. 23 1-2 40-64

Ämneskategorier

Ekonomisk historia

Ekonomisk geografi

Nationalekonomi

DOI

10.1111/jwip.12139

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Senast uppdaterat

2021-03-17