Comments: Labour Mobility of Academic Inventors…

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Comments: Labour Mobility of Academic Inventors… Paula Stephan Georgia State University Lausanne September 2006

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Comments: Labour Mobility of Academic Inventors…. Paula Stephan Georgia State University Lausanne September 2006. Topic. Topic is important Knowledge transfers are rarely examined through movement of people Yet clear mobility plays a role, especially in transfer of tacit knowledge - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Comments: Labour Mobility of Academic Inventors…

Page 1: Comments:  Labour Mobility of Academic Inventors…

Comments: Labour Mobility of Academic Inventors…

Paula StephanGeorgia State UniversityLausanneSeptember 2006

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Topic

Topic is important Knowledge transfers are rarely examined

through movement of people Yet clear mobility plays a role, especially

in transfer of tacit knowledge Certainly highly appropriate given focus

of this conference

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Approach

Use PatVal database to analyze mobility of individuals who had a university affiliation at time of patent

A relatively broad definition of university employees in the sense that some do not have a PhD

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Sample/Goal

PatVal survey had a response from 9017 inventors of a patent between 1993-1997. Replied between July 2003-April 2004.

433 of these were at a university at time of patenting event

Goal: analyze the mobility of these university inventors.

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Assignment Finding

82.2% of the patents made by one of the 433 inventors with a university affiliation were not assigned to the university

This is “big” news. Suggests assignment data grossly

underestimates what is going on at the university Raises question as to why--for some countries

“Professor Privilege” explains outcome; but clearly more is going on here.

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Sample for Analysis of Mobility

Winnow sample of 433 to 230 22 move to a firm (9 self employed) 22 move to another PRO

Further winnow sample of 230 to 198 19 move to a firm 15 move to another PRO

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Hazard of Moving

Examine relationship between approximately 25 variables and hazard of moving subsequent to patenting

Estimate duration model using a step-wise approach, entering sets of variables in 9 clusters

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Major Findings

Less likely to move the more experience prior to joining university and more tenure at the university

Authors see this as consistent with work by Dasgupta and David—more university capital one has accumulated less likely to move

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Patent Characteristics and Mobility

Higher patent value (as assessed by respondent at time of interview) more likely to move—tacit knowledge interpretation is appealing.

Presence of co-inventors working in another organization increases likelihood of moving

Find no evidence that assignment relates to mobility.

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Which Sector?

Estimate a competing risks model of moving to either a company or a PRO

Results are somewhat fragile due to sample size but suggest Patvalue relates to move to business Collaboration relates to move to another PRO Multiple co-inventors decreases probability of

moving to a firm—no need for the tacit knowledge embodied in the inventor?

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Policy

Authors say results suggest that knowledge transferred to industry may be not of top quality as it is not the high caliber researchers that move but those of lower scientific and technological output.

Mobility that exists is concentrated in certain countries

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Questions/Comments

How much of “Big News” assignment finding relates to fact that 139 of the 433 were “working in a private organization during the patent discovery process” (p. 9)

Way in which multiple patents are handled is difficult to follow. Page 10 suggests that these inventors were dropped; other places get sense they were not dropped.

Is patent value variable credible? Would not the inventor see a high value ex post if industry were interested?

Selling. Ability to sell one’s science is important in engaging in entrepreneurial activity. Possible that those who are good at selling themselves (and hence get a position with industry) also see their patents as having a higher value.

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Cashing Out Hypothesis

One could hypothesize exactly the opposite result with regard to experience—and indeed Dasgupta and David have

Cashing out: One accumulates human capital and reputation and then cashes out towards end of career

Why don’t authors find such a result? Do not enter variables in a non-linear manner Include individuals in the sample who do not

have long-run prospects of remaining in the university and must exit

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Other Comments

Small size of sample provides an opportunity

Do “case studies” by looking at cvs (if this is possible) of the 198; see extent to which case study validates the

empirical results Examine contribution of movers subsequent to

move Create a matched sample of non-inventors

so that larger question of how inventing affects mobility could be investigated

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Policy

Little evidence that it is “low” quality who move; It’s early career people who move

More general concern for Europe may be why so few PhDs work in industry.

A major means by which U.S. industry absorbs public knowledge is through hiring PhDs.

PhDs working in industry play not only an absorptive role but an innovative role as well.

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Thanks!

For providing an in-depth analysis of mobility

For raising a number of interesting questions that are seldom addressed by other researchers

For reminding us that assignment data provides but a small piece of the university-knowledge transfer picture.