TY - JOUR
T1 - The role of localised, recombinant and anticipated technological change in European regions
AU - Maggioni, Mario Agostino
AU - Marrocu, Emanuela
AU - Uberti, Teodora Erika
AU - Usai, Stefano
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - How regions develop and evolve along their productive and technological path is a central question for scholars and policymakers. From an evolutionary perspective, regions are likely to create and develop new technologies closer to their pre-existing specialisation. In this study, we map the regional European technological knowledge space and investigate regional specialisation's pattern and evolution in the most innovative EU regions. More specifically, we map the technological trajectories of 198 EU regions from 1986 to 2010 using data on 121 patent sectors at the NUTS2 level for the 11 most innovative European countries, including Switzerland and Norway. We maintain that the evolution of technological specialisation depends on three main factors: (i) localised technological change/technological relatedness, (ii) knowledge recombination of related and unrelated technologies, and (iii) regions' capability of anticipating future technological change in related sectors. Results based on panel-ordered response models, which also account for spatial and technological spillovers, show that the probability of reaching higher states of technological specialisation is mainly driven by localised technological change and anticipated future technological relatedness. In contrast, recombinant innovation contributes to a lower extent.
AB - How regions develop and evolve along their productive and technological path is a central question for scholars and policymakers. From an evolutionary perspective, regions are likely to create and develop new technologies closer to their pre-existing specialisation. In this study, we map the regional European technological knowledge space and investigate regional specialisation's pattern and evolution in the most innovative EU regions. More specifically, we map the technological trajectories of 198 EU regions from 1986 to 2010 using data on 121 patent sectors at the NUTS2 level for the 11 most innovative European countries, including Switzerland and Norway. We maintain that the evolution of technological specialisation depends on three main factors: (i) localised technological change/technological relatedness, (ii) knowledge recombination of related and unrelated technologies, and (iii) regions' capability of anticipating future technological change in related sectors. Results based on panel-ordered response models, which also account for spatial and technological spillovers, show that the probability of reaching higher states of technological specialisation is mainly driven by localised technological change and anticipated future technological relatedness. In contrast, recombinant innovation contributes to a lower extent.
KW - Revealed technological advantage
KW - R12
KW - localised technology change
KW - recombinant innovation
KW - anticipated technological change
KW - European regions
KW - evolutionary economic geography
KW - panel ordered response models
KW - C23
KW - O14
KW - O31
KW - O33
KW - O52
KW - R11
KW - technological knowledge space
KW - Revealed technological advantage
KW - R12
KW - localised technology change
KW - recombinant innovation
KW - anticipated technological change
KW - European regions
KW - evolutionary economic geography
KW - panel ordered response models
KW - C23
KW - O14
KW - O31
KW - O33
KW - O52
KW - R11
KW - technological knowledge space
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/300752
U2 - 10.1080/10438599.2024.2435032
DO - 10.1080/10438599.2024.2435032
M3 - Article
SN - 1043-8599
SP - 1
EP - 24
JO - Economics of Innovation and New Technology
JF - Economics of Innovation and New Technology
ER -