INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC-PRACTICAL CONFERENCE
«ACTUAL ISSUES OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE SOCIAL SECTOR OF THE
ECONOMY: DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN EXPERIENCE»
ANDIJAN, UZBEKISTAN, MAY
2020
201
«Иқтисодиётнинг ижтимоий секторини ривожлантиришнинг долзарб масалалари: миллий ва хорижий тажриба»
«
Актуальные вопросы развития социального сектора экономики: отечественный и зарубежный опыт
»
innovative, creative, uncertain, systematic and replicable [1]. Many empirical studies
have focused on the impact of R&D on economic growth and considered that
hypothetical researchers 'continued to stand on the shoulders of past giants' [2].
Davidson and Segerstrom [3], Janjua and Samad [4] and Acemoglu [5] found positive
effects of R&D expenditure and investment on economic growth through
technological advances. Similarly, Koopmans and Donselaar concluded that a 10%
increase in R&D was associated with a 1.1-1.4% increase in productivity [6]. From
different perspectives, Mohnen conducted a thorough study of how R&D investment
affects productivity and economic growth. He concluded that investment in R&D
produces positive results and contributes to the diffusion of knowledge on a scale that
varies across countries. On the other hand, Bloom and co-authors [7] found that
research productivity was declining by 5.3% annually worldwide. The authors note
that research productivity has been halved for about 13 years. They argue that while
R&D spending is growing at a slower rate, the economy is growing more slowly.
Thus, to maintain the current rate of growth, the economy must double its investment
in R&D every 13 years. Frenkel and the co-authors [8] have criticized the complex
and cumbersome bureaucratic approval procedures that delay entry with novelty.
Chen and co-authors [9] concluded that sustainable economic development along the
innovation path relies on basic and applied research with the publication of scientific
articles and patents. They attribute high productivity growth to patent-based
productivity growth, especially in developing countries. Eom and Lee [10]
highlighted the successful commercialization of R&D results and the increasing share
of innovative products in sales, rather than just increasing the number of patents.
Most R&D work is imitated research and development that replicates the products of
other companies, while innovative R&D is focused on developing new high-quality
products [11]. Janjua and Samad [12] noted that as long as imitation costs are lower
than innovation costs, developing countries will develop faster than developed
countries.
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