What are the top ten most innovative countries?
The United States, South Korea and Japan are known for inventions and innovation, but where do other countries worldwide fit in?
Bloomberg Rankings
recently released the results of an examination of over 200 countries
and how they compare in terms of innovation. Measured in seven factors,
including research & development intensity, high-tech density,
present researchers, manufacturing capabilities, levels of education and
patent activity, each country was ranked on a scale of 0 to 100
percent. An average score was given for countries that had “sufficient”
data for at least five of the seven categories.
R&D intensity was based on research and development as a
percentage of GDP, productivity on GDP per employee and per hour worked,
and high-tech density is based on the percentage of publicly-listed
companies who specialize in areas including aerospace, defense,
biotechnology, Internet software and renewable energy firms.
The concentration of researchers was quantified based on how many
research & development staff exist for every one million people,
manufacturing capabilities were measured through GDP, and patent
activity on resident patent filings per million people and for every one
million spent in research and development. Finally, tertiary efficiency
is explained as the enrollment ration in all subjects for
post-secondary students and the graduation of those who majored in
science, engineering, manufacturing and construction.
Which countries came on top?
1. United States
- R&D intensity: 9th
- Productivity: 3rd
- High-tech density: 1st
- Researcher concentration: 10th
- Manufacturing capability: 52nd
- Tertiary efficiency: 26th
- Patent activity: 6th
2. South Korea
- R&D intensity: 5th
- Productivity: 32nd
- High-tech density: 3rd
- Researcher concentration: 8th
- Manufacturing capability: 3rd
- Tertiary efficiency: 4th
- Patent activity: 1st
3. Germany
- R&D intensity: 8th
- Productivity: 7th
- High-tech density: 4th
- Researcher concentration: 17th
- Manufacturing capability: 23rd
- Tertiary efficiency: 25th
- Patent activity: 7th
4. Finland
- R&D intensity: 2nd
- Productivity: 14th
- High-tech density: 11th
- Researcher concentration: 1st
- Manufacturing capability: 31st
- Tertiary efficiency: 3rd
- Patent activity: 23rd
5. Sweden
- R&D intensity: 3rd
- Productivity: 11th
- High-tech density: 6th
- Researcher concentration: 7th
- Manufacturing capability: 49th
- Tertiary efficiency: 21st
- Patent activity: 38th
6. Japan
- R&D intensity: 4th
- Productivity: 21st
- High-tech density: 20th
- Researcher concentration: 6th
- Manufacturing capability: 15th
- Tertiary efficiency: 27th
- Patent activity: 2nd
7. Singapore
- R&D intensity: 11th
- Productivity: 20th
- High-tech density: 16th
- Researcher concentration: 4th
- Manufacturing capability: 10th
- Tertiary efficiency: 20th
- Patent activity: 53rd
8. Austria
- R&D intensity: 10th
- Productivity: 9th
- High-tech density: 14th
- Researcher concentration: 15th
- Manufacturing capability: 29th
- Tertiary efficiency: 28th
- Patent activity: 19th
9. Denmark
- R&D intensity: 6th
- Productivity: 12th
- High-tech density: 18th
- Researcher concentration: 3rd
- Manufacturing capability: 66th
- Tertiary efficiency: 30th
- Patent activity: 20th
10. France
- R&D intensity: 14th
- Productivity: 6th
- High-tech density: 8th
- Researcher concentration: 18th
- Manufacturing capability: 73rd
- Tertiary efficiency: 12th
- Patent activity: 18th
The “Bloomberg Innovation Quotient” is based on data from Bloomberg,
World Bank, World Intellectual Property Organization, Conference Board,
OECD, and UNESCO. For the full list, check out Bloomberg’s
50 Most Innovative Countries list.