Patent Statistics as Economic Indicators: A Survey

1998 Journal of Economic Literature 4,065 citations

Abstract

This survey reviews the growing use of patent data in economic analysis. After describing some of the main characteristics of patents and patent data, it focuses on the use of patents as an indicator of technological change. Cross-sectional and time-series studies of the relationship of patents to R&D expenditures are reviewed, as well as scattered estimates of the distribution of patent values and the value of patent rights, the latter being based on recent analyses of European patent renewal data. Time-series trends of patents granted in the U.S. are examined and their decline in the 1970s is found to be an artifact of the budget stringencies at the Patent Office. The longer run downward trend in patents per R&D dollar is interpreted not as an indication of diminishing returns but rather as a reflection of the changing meaning of such data over time. The conclusion is reached that, in spite of many difficulties and reservations, patent data remain a unique resource for the study of technical change.

Keywords

Liberian dollarDistribution (mathematics)Value (mathematics)EconomicsPatent officeMeaning (existential)Artifact (error)Us dollarStatisticsMacroeconomicsPolitical scienceExchange rateFinanceMathematicsLawComputer science

Related Publications

Real Effects of Academic Research

The existence of geographically mediated "spillovers" from university research to commercial innovation is explored using state-level time-series data on corporate patents, corp...

1989 American Economic Review 3003 citations

Publication Info

Year
1998
Type
article
Volume
28
Issue
4
Pages
287-343
Citations
4065
Access
Closed

External Links

Citation Metrics

4065
OpenAlex

Cite This

Zvi Griliches (1998). Patent Statistics as Economic Indicators: A Survey. Journal of Economic Literature , 28 (4) , 287-343.