BOOK-CHAPTER

Patentable occupations

OECD

Year: 2022 OECD rural studies   Publisher: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development

Abstract

The proposal on adjusting innovation indicators for the occupational structure or rural economies comes from discussions with the OECD Expert Advisory Committee for Rural Innovation. During the sessions, several rural academics identified structural problems associated with how innovation is measured in rural areas and why the bias associated may not be territorially homogenous. To address this, work by Dotzel (2017[6]) and Wojan (2021[7]) proposes an occupation-driven approach for analysing regional invention. The authors argue that patenting rates should be computed on the subset of workers that might plausibly contribute to patenting. To do this, the authors regress the aggregate number of patents produced in the commuting zone during the period 2000-05 on the share of the workforce employed in a selection of detailed census occupations. The authors' commuting zone-level regression includes controls on the patent stock, human capital share (working-age population with a bachelor's degree or higher), population density, a natural amenity score and the wage-rental ratio. They apply the analysis to a core set of occupations (from the U.S. Department of Labor Employment and Training Administration O*NET database) defined by the National Science Foundation's classification of science, engineering and technical (SET) occupations, along with an iterative random selection of other occupations that may have a strong association with patenting. Ten thousand regressions are estimated with 19 non-SET occupations randomly included in each estimation. The inventive subset inclusion criteria for the non-SET occupations are those occupations-associated coefficients that are positive and significant in at least 75% of their regressions in the metro or non-metro analysis and are characterised as inventive. Of the 300 non-SET occupations included in the analysis, 11 are identified as inventive, that is consistently associated with positive, significant coefficients.

Keywords:
Workforce Human capital Census Wage Amenity Demographic economics Population Stock (firearms) Economics Labour economics Geography Economic growth Sociology Demography Finance

Metrics

0
Cited By
0.00
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
0
Refs
0.69
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Topics

Innovation Policy and R&D
Social Sciences →  Economics, Econometrics and Finance →  Economics and Econometrics
Firm Innovation and Growth
Social Sciences →  Economics, Econometrics and Finance →  Economics and Econometrics

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