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  • Video

    How to Boost Economic Growth and Innovation

    In this episode of WIPO’s Mission Imagination series, Ricardo Hausmann explains the crucial role that knowhow plays in promoting economic growth and development, shares what governments and the private sector […]
  • Working Papers

    Chacua, C., et al., 2024

    Global Trends in Innovation Patterns: A Complexity Approach

    Technological know-how in a country shapes its growth potential and competitiveness. Scientific publications, patents, and international trade data offer complementary insights into how ideas from science, technology, and production evolve, […]
    Growth Lab
  • Working Papers

    Chacua, C., et al., 2024

    Innovation Policies Under Economic Complexity

    Recent geopolitical challenges have revived the implementation of industrial and innovation policies. Ongoing discussions focus on supporting cutting-edge industries and strategic technologies but ignore the impact on economic growth. In this paper, researchers explain why effective innovation policies should be place-based and multidimensional, leveraging countries’ existing capabilities and addressing countries’ current problems.

    Recent geopolitical challenges have revived the implementation of industrial and innovation policies. Ongoing discussions focus on supporting cutting-edge industries and strategic technologies but hardly pay attention to their impact on economic growth. In light of this, we discuss the design of innovation policies to address current development challenges while considering the complex nature of productive activities. Our approach conceives economic development and technological progress as a process of accumulation and diversification of knowledge. This process is limited by the tacit nature of knowledge and by countries’ binding constraints to growth. Consequently, effective innovation policies should be place-based and multidimensional, leveraging countries’ existing capabilities and addressing countries’ current problems. This contrasts policies that lead to economic efficiencies, such as copying other countries’ solutions to problems that countries do not currently have.