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<strong>UNESCO</strong> <strong>SCIENCE</strong> <strong>REPORT</strong><br />

Figure 12.3: GERD/GDP ratio for the Black Sea countries, 2001–2013<br />

1.2<br />

1.0<br />

1.02<br />

Turkey 0.95<br />

0.8<br />

0.71<br />

Ukraine 0.77<br />

Belarus 0.69<br />

0.6<br />

0.54<br />

0.4<br />

0.2<br />

0.34<br />

0.28<br />

0.24<br />

Georgia 0.18<br />

Moldova 0.36<br />

Armenia 0.24<br />

Azerbaijan 0.21<br />

0.0<br />

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013<br />

Source: <strong>UNESCO</strong> Institute for Statistics, March 2015<br />

High-tech exports 7 provide a more approximate measure;<br />

they place Belarus and Ukraine, and to a lesser extent Turkey,<br />

at levels similar to those of some major middle-income<br />

countries but their performance is by no means comparable<br />

to that of countries pursuing global competitiveness through<br />

technology-intensive production, such as Israel or the<br />

Republic of Korea (Table 12.3). This said, the fact that<br />

some countries are expanding production and trade in<br />

medium-tech products can also attest to STI activity, as we<br />

shall see in some of the country profiles that follow.<br />

Patents provide an even more roundabout indicator of<br />

innovation. Moreover, most Black Sea countries do not have<br />

patent indicators using the ‘nowcasting’ method, which<br />

provides reasonably accurate and timely estimates for OECD<br />

countries. With this caveat in mind, we can observe the<br />

following (Table 12.4):<br />

n Per unit of GDP, the number of patents filed by residents<br />

at the national patent offices of Black Sea countries was<br />

7. including a growing number of commodities such as computers and other ICT<br />

goods<br />

among the highest in the world in 2012, according to the<br />

Global Innovation Index (2014).<br />

n Patent Cooperation Treaty applications, indicating<br />

an extra effort to protect intellectual property<br />

internationally, have been growing moderately in<br />

Armenia, Moldova and Ukraine and very strongly in<br />

Turkey. Applications to the two largest developed<br />

country offices (European Patent Office and the US<br />

Patent and Trademark Office) have grown quite strongly<br />

for Turkish residents and, to a lesser extent, for Armenian<br />

and Ukrainian ones.<br />

n None of the Black Sea countries seem to invest<br />

significant resources in Triadic patents, indicating that<br />

they are not yet at a stage of development where they<br />

can compete with the advanced economies for S&Tdriven<br />

industrial competitiveness.<br />

n The Black Sea countries appear to invest heavily in<br />

acquiring trademarks, which give a measure of creative<br />

effort but are less directly correlated with S&T as such,<br />

according to the Global Innovation Index (2014).<br />

318

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