S. Korea Ranks 2nd Among OECD Nations in R&D Spending as Portion of GDP: Report | Be Korea-savvy

S. Korea Ranks 2nd Among OECD Nations in R&D Spending as Portion of GDP: Report


This undated file photo provided by the Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute shows researchers of the government-funded institute.

This undated file photo provided by the Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute shows researchers of the government-funded institute.

SEOUL, April 20 (Korea Bizwire)South Korea placed second in research and development (R&D) spending as a portion of its gross domestic product (GDP) among major developed countries in 2020, but its tepid growth in recent years calls for more policy support, a report said Wednesday.

South Korea’s R&D expenditures reached 93.1 trillion won (US$75.4 billion) in 2020, accounting for 4.81 percent of GDP, according to a recent report by the Federation of Korean Industries (FKI), the country’s largest business lobby.

That made South Korea the biggest R&D spender among 36 out of 38 member countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) trailing only Israel, whose R&D portion came to 5.44 percent, the report said.

Chile was excluded from the finding due to limited available data. Costa Rica was also excluded from the report because it joined the Paris-based organization last year.

The report also found that South Korea’s R&D portion jumped 2.54 percentage points last year from 2001, a nearly fivefold increase compared with the OECD average of 0.53 percentage point.

Large companies spent 71.3 trillion won, representing the bulk of the expenditures, while 21.6 trillion won was spent by the government or other public entities.

The R&D spending, however, has remained stalled at the average of around 7.5-8.0 percent in the past decade, retreating from the average 11.4 percent for 2001-2010.

In 2018, South Korea ranked far below the OECD average in earnings from intellectual property royalties versus R&D spending, with the percentage coming to 9.9 percent, compared with the OECD’s 27.7 percent.

The FKI called for stronger policy support for large enterprises, whose R&D spending makes up more than half of all corporate R&D investment.

“The corporate R&D investment has a greater positive effect on the total factor productivity than government or public R&D,” the report said.

“It is necessary to revitalize domestic R&D by strengthening tax support for large corporations that are leading the private sector R&D,” it said.

(Yonhap)

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