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Clustering National Innovation Capability: Positioning of Ukraine

Oleksandr Fedirko (Kyiv National Economic University named after Vadym Hetman, Faculty of International Economics and Management, Kyiv, Ukraine)
Nataliia Fedirko (Kyiv National Economic University named after Vadym Hetman, Economics and Management Faculty, Kyiv, Ukraine)

The Framework for Resilient Industry: A Holistic Approach for Developing Economies

ISBN: 978-1-83753-735-8, eISBN: 978-1-83753-734-1

Publication date: 26 March 2024

Abstract

Introduction: Today the ability of nations to develop and implement innovations is core for their international competitiveness. Ukraine is striving for innovation progress; however, its innovation performance is relatively low. The research problem is to find the bottlenecks, affecting Ukraine’s innovation capability.

Purpose: This study aims to research the national innovation capability profiles, based on cluster analysis, to develop an understanding of drivers and threats for the innovation capability of Ukraine.

Need of the study: The knowledge-based economy, which had already turned into one of the most efficient developmental models of the 21st century, became a key driver of international competitiveness for the leading developed countries due to their progressive structural shifts towards the growth of high-technology manufacturing and knowledge-intensive sectors. These trends are significant to capture for the sake of increasing the innovation capability of the economy of Ukraine.

Methodology: The study is based on the K-means clustering method, which is employed for identifying 10 country clusters based on the indicators of their R&D and innovation activities, which allowed us to assess the innovation capability of Ukraine in comparison with 140 countries of the world. Data selection and normalisation were based on the 2019 Global Competitiveness Report indicators.

Findings: The study showed that Ukraine’s innovation capability problems are typical for most developing countries and are prevalently connected to low R&D expenditures, patent applications, and international co-invention activities. Most countries, except for the technologically developed ones, follow the so-called ‘passive technological learning’ strategies, which usually result in low economic productivity.

Practical implications: Several innovation policy implications have been developed for the government of Ukraine based on the cluster analysis results and accounting for the problems of the national innovation system (NIS).

Keywords

Citation

Fedirko, O. and Fedirko, N. (2024), "Clustering National Innovation Capability: Positioning of Ukraine", Kumar, N., Sood, K., Özen, E. and Grima, S. (Ed.) The Framework for Resilient Industry: A Holistic Approach for Developing Economies (Emerald Studies in Finance, Insurance, and Risk Management), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 1-21. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-83753-734-120241001

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024 Oleksandr Fedirko and Nataliia Fedirko