Unveiling the Untapped Potential of Innovation Ecosystems

March 21, 2025

By: Federico Moscatelli

March 21, 2025 ・ minutes reading time

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Innovation is the lifeblood of economic growth, shaping industries, creating jobs, and solving global challenges. However, understanding a country’s innovation potential is no simple task. Countries often have hidden capabilities that, when identified and leveraged, can unlock new technological and economic opportunities. By examining the interplay of scientific, technological, and trade capabilities, policymakers and stakeholders can identify these latent potentials and craft strategies to harness them effectively.

The interconnected dimensions of innovation

Scientific capabilities, technological advancements, and trade competencies do not always develop in tandem. While scientific research can enhance a country’s ability to absorb and adapt new technologies, not all scientific outputs directly translate into innovations like patents. Studies have shown that patenting activity often correlates with scientific publications. However, the connection is nuanced—some fields are more likely to produce patents based on existing scientific capabilities, while others may lag behind despite robust academic output.

For instance, research indicates that regional expertise in specific scientific domains can spur the development of related technologies. This phenomenon highlights a key aspect of innovation: relatedness. Relatedness between scientific and technological capabilities increases the likelihood of breakthroughs, allowing countries to diversify into new technological fields more effectively.

Identifying latent potential: a comparative look

The World IP Report 2024 has hinted on the untapped innovation potential of countries. By analyzing the proximity connections between productive, scientific and technological capabilities, experts could estimate the number of patents a country might produce if it performed like an average developed economy.

Take, for example, Sweden and Colombia. Sweden, a high-income country, demonstrates significant untapped potential in complex domains like electronics and semiconductors. Despite its robust scientific output, Sweden produces fewer patents in these fields compared to similar economies. For instance, Sweden’s patent production in electronic technologies is around half of what would be expected based on its scientific publications. These gaps indicate areas where better collaboration between academia, industry, and the intellectual property system could yield substantial gains.

In contrast, Colombia, a middle-income country, faces different challenges. Its conversion of scientific outputs into patents is significantly lower than that of higher-income peers, particularly when looking at its scientific activities. For example, in biopharma and ICT, Colombia’s patenting activity is a fraction of its potential. These figures suggest structural barriers, such as insufficient linkages between research institutions and industry, the need to enhance the international competitiveness of its outputs, or other gaps in the innovation ecosystem.

Charting the path forward

Understanding these dynamics is crucial for crafting effective innovation policies. Policymakers can use insights into the interaction between scientific, technological, and trade capabilities to identify and address missing links. For Canada, this might mean fostering partnerships in underperforming fields like electronics and semiconductors. For Colombia, the focus could be on strengthening institutions and creating incentives to translate scientific research into market-ready technologies, particularly in biopharma, a sector not only with high untapped scientific potential, but also supported by its productive one.

By prioritizing collaboration and investing in the right areas, countries can turn their latent innovation potential into a driver of economic transformation. The innovation frontier is not static; it evolves with the interplay of capabilities. Identifying these interactions allows nations to strategically position themselves for future growth and success.

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Disclaimer: The short posts and articles included in the Innovation Economics Themes Series typically report on research in progress and are circulated in a timely manner for discussion and comment. The views expressed in them are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of WIPO or its Member States. ​​​​​​​

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