Mikhail Martynovich
Senior Lecturer
On the urban bias of patents and the scaling of innovation
Author
Summary, in English
While recent studies have heralded large cities as “innovation machines”, the majority of regional studies of innovation are based on patent indicators. In this paper, we compare regional patent and innovation counts in Sweden (1970-2014) and document the presence of a sizeable urban bias in patent indicators, which is primarily explained by higher patent filing propensity in urban areas. We also show that using administrative spatial units which do not account for spatial organization of economic activity tends to exacerbate this bias. This poses a problem for academic studies that wish to understand regional innovation, or policy reports benchmarking regional performance.
Department/s
- Department of Economic History
- Sustainability transformations over time and space
- CIRCLE
- Department of Human Geography
Publishing year
2024
Language
English
Publication/Series
Papers in Evolutionary Economic Geography
Issue
2024:22
Document type
Preprint
Topic
- Business Administration
Status
Published