Posts Tagged ‘Vivek Wadhwa’

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Thu Jul 16th 2009 at 9:53am UTC

Global Sources of American Innovation

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

Yesterday, we looked at overall trends in U.S. innovation measured by patents. Today, we break out U.S. patents between U.S.-resident and non-resident or foreign inventors patenting in the U.S.

Numerous studies have shown that, over the past two or three decades, the role of foreign scientists, technologists, and entrepreneurs in U.S. innovation has increased. Recent studies by AnnaLee Saxenian and Vivek Wadhwa and others find that anywhere between a third and half of all Silicon Valley start-ups during the 1990s had a foreign entrepreneur or scientist on their core founding team. As I have previously argued, foreign-born scientists currently make up 17 percent of all bachelor’s degree holders, 29 percent of master’s degree holders, 38 percent of PhDs, and nearly 25 percent of American scientists and engineers. My earlier research shows that Japanese companies – and some European companies as well – chose to locate research labs in the U.S. to access a diverse mix of scientific talent they cannot attract in their home countries.

The graph below shows the overall trend in patenting for U.S.-resident and non-resident foreign inventors between 1980 and 2005. Non-resident inventors have just about pulled even with U.S. inventors in patenting, and their rate of inventive activity more or less tracks that of U.S.-based inventors. But here again, even with two dips since 2000, the rate and level of innovation over the past decade remains up.

Clearly, foreign inventors have become a key feature of the U.S. innovation system. Without them the level of innovation would be much lower. Another way of saying this is that the American system of innovation has become increasingly dependent upon non-resident inventors. Foreign inventors patent in the U.S. to secure intellectual property protection in the large U.S. market. Clusters of sophisticated and demanding consumers and end-users help make the U.S. the place to be for high-end innovation, as Amir Bhidé points out in The Venturesome Economy.

While foreign patenting boosts the overall rate of innovation in the U.S., there is a considerable chance that these patented innovations are commercialized and produced off-shore, and thus that the U.S. economy will accrue less overall economic benefit from those technologies. While this is not direct evidence for Mandel’s innovation interrupted thesis, it provides a possible mechanism that might limit the commercialization and overall economic impact of innovation in the U.S.

Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Thu May 1st 2008 at 8:51am UTC

Who’s the Typical High-Tech Entrepreneur?

Thursday, May 1st, 2008

That’s the question Vivek Wadhwa and colleagues ask in a newly released survey study:

Contrary to the popular belief that tech entrepreneurs start their companies
in their teens or early 20s, we found that the average and median age of
founders was 39. Twice as many were older than 50 as were younger than 25. And
there were twice as many over 60 as under 20 …
We found the vast majority (92%) of founders held bachelor’s degrees, 31% held
master’s degrees, and 10% had completed PhDs. Nearly half of these degrees were
in science-, technology-, engineering-, and mathematics-related disciplines. And
one-third were in business, accounting, and finance …

Almost every major U.S. university was represented in the ranks of company
founders—including schools such as The University of Southern Mississippi and
Akron University. Only 8% graduated from Ivy League schools. But that was
significantly higher than their proportion of all graduates. In other words, you
don’t need to graduate from an elite university to become an entrepreneur, but
graduates of Ivy League schools were more likely to become entrepreneurs than
others …

Founders holding MBA degrees established their companies the soonest compared
to other advanced-degree holders—an average of 13 years after graduation.
Master’s-degree holders took 14.7 years and bachelor’s degree holders took 16.7
years. Those with PhDs typically waited 21 years.

More here.