The “Science of Science Policy”: reflections on the important questions and the challenges they present |
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Authors: | Adam B. Jaffe |
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Affiliation: | (1) Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Fred C. Hecht Professor in Economics and Dean of Arts and Sciences, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA, USA;(2) National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, MA, USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() Developing the “Science of Science Policy” will require data collection and analysis related to the processes of innovation and technological change, and the effects of government policy on those processes. There has been much work on these topics in the last three decades, but there remain difficult problems of finding proxies for subtle concepts, endogeneity, distinguishing private and social returns, untangling cumulative effects, measuring the impact of government programs in a true “but for” sense, and sorting out national and global effects. I offer observations on how to think about these issues. This paper was presented as the Keynote Address at the NSF Workshop on Advancing Measures of Innovation: Knowledge Flows, Business Metrics, and Measurement Strategies, Arlington, VA, June 2006. |
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Keywords: | Technological change Innovation Technology policy |
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