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[This study draws on detailed information on inventor address from 34,196 patented biotechnology inventions, made in the United States between 1970 and 2010, as indicators of innovation and entrepreneurship in three largely rural industries—(1) agriculture, (2) bioenergy, and (3) environment. Three approaches (mapping, Moran I, and negative binomial panel regression analysis) are used to analyze the spatial distribution of patented inventions by region, to identify the density of inventions overall as well as the space–time dynamics of invention cumulativeness. We find these inventions have been spatially concentrated in about 30 major metropolitan clusters, and that spatial distribution has remained remarkably stable over time. Factors of population and earnings are unsurprisingly correlated with invention counts. However, farm proprietor income is also positively related to the number of invention counts, suggesting that more linkages and spillovers within the industry lead to more opportunity for inventions. Significant policy implications include the distribution of public research funding, technology transfer strategies, regional collective action for fostering (largely urban) entrepreneurship for (largely rural) industries, and the actual roles and impacts of (again urban) innovation in these industries on commonly held policy objectives for rural economic development. There are also important implications from the extent to which (urban) innovators and (rural) producers in these industries are not intimately colocated.]
Published: May 3, 2019
Keywords: Patent; Agriculture; Environment; Biotechnology; Innovation; Agglomeration; Urban; Rural
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