The alignment of public research supply and industry demand for effective technology transfer: the case of Italy

Italy lags behind other industrialized countries in public to private technology transfer. One of the causes of this may be the mismatch between new knowledge supplied by public research and industry demand. We test this hypothesis through a survey of leading public research scientists in four high-tech sectors. The findings show that the results of most research projects seem to be of immediate industrial interest, which contrasts with the low level of patents and licensing of Italian public research institutions. For one-third of the research results, there are no Italian companies that are able to exploit them. The same, however, is not true for the remaining results, which shows that the misalignment between public supply and industry demand alone cannot account for poor technology transfer. A closer coordination of research policy and industrial policy is required, as well as closer attention to initiatives which may support the transfer of public research results to Italian industry. Copyright , Beech Tree Publishing.

[1]  S. Breschi,et al.  Networks of inventors and the role of academia: an exploration of Italian patent data , 2004 .

[2]  Fabrizio Tuzi,et al.  The scientific specialisation of the Italian regions , 2005, Scientometrics.

[3]  Andrea Bonaccorsi,et al.  Explaining poor performance of European science: Institutions versus policies , 2007 .

[4]  Wesley M. Cohen,et al.  R&D spillovers, patents and the incentives to innovate in Japan and the United States , 2002 .

[5]  R. Tijssen Global and domestic utilization of industrial relevant science: patent citation analysis of science-technology interactions and knowledge flows , 2001 .

[6]  Giovanni Abramo The Technology Transfer of the Italian Public Research System: the Case of the National Research Council of Italy , 2018, ArXiv.

[7]  Barry Bozeman,et al.  Technology transfer and public policy: a review of research and theory , 2000 .

[8]  Fabio Pugini,et al.  L'attività di licensing delle università italiane: un'indagine empirica , 2005 .

[9]  Arvids A. Ziedonis,et al.  The growth of patenting and licensing by U.S. universities: an assessment of the effects of the Bayh–Dole act of 1980 , 2001 .

[10]  R. Nelson,et al.  American Universities and Technical Advance in Industry , 1994 .

[11]  Koenraad Debackere,et al.  Publication and patent behavior of academic researchers: Conflicting, reinforcing or merely co-existing? , 2006 .

[12]  John P. Walsh,et al.  Special Issue on University Entrepreneurship and Technology Transfer: Links and Impacts: The Influence of Public Research on Industrial R&D , 2002, Manag. Sci..

[13]  Gregory Tassey,et al.  The functions of technology infrastructure in a competitive economy , 1991 .

[14]  Andrea Piccaluga,et al.  Attività brevettuale degli enti pubblici di ricerca italiani. Un'analisi sul periodo 1982-2001 , 2001 .

[15]  Giovanni Abramo Il sistema ricerca in Italia. Il nodo del trasferimento tecnologico , 1998 .

[16]  Rosa Grimaldi,et al.  Institutional Changes and the Commercialization of Academic Knowledge: A Study of Italian Universities' Patenting Activities Between 1965 and 2002 , 2006 .

[17]  Zvi Griliches,et al.  Research Productivity in a System of Universities , 1998 .