The European Commission on Friday published the 2007 edition of its annual
scoreboard of companies' spending on research and development.
The scoreboard showed that corporate R&D has increased by 10% in the year
under scrutiny, with EU-based companies increasing their R&D investment
by 7.4%. This compared to 5.3% growth reported in the 2006 edition.
The scoreboard also showed an upward trend in companies' profitability all
over the world. The world's biggest investor in R&D in the 2007 Scoreboard
is US-based Pfizer, with EUR5.8 billion. The top EU company is Germany's DaimlerChrysler,
with EUR5.2 billion
"We are only ever going to improve our R&D performance if more companies
see the benefit of investing in research," observed European Science and
Research Commissioner Janez Potocnik, continuing:
"The positive upward trend in R&D investment seen in the last two
years is encouraging, and leads me to believe that our innovation strategy is
on the right track. But we must not allow ourselves to be complacent –
quite the opposite: we should reinforce the positive measures already taken
to consolidate and improve private investment in R&D."
The EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard is published annually by the
European Commission as part of its Industrial Research Investment Monitoring
activity. The figures are derived from company accounts for the previous financial
year and indicate the investment made by a company from its own funds.
The Scoreboard does not reflect where the expenditure was made, just the origin
of the company making the investment. The Scoreboard comprises the top1,000
R&D companies from the EU, and the top1,000 R&D companies from the rest
of the world. Altogether, the 2,000 Scoreboard companies invested EUR372 billion
in R&D, estimated to represent more than 85% of corporate expenditure on
R&D worldwide.
According to the EC:
"On the downside, the report shows that R&D investment by EU companies
is still growing at a lower rate than their non-EU counterparts, a trend identified
in every edition of the Industrial R&D Scoreboard published to date. This
difference is primarily explained by a growth rate in high R&D-intensive
sectors outside the EU of almost twice that within the EU. These sectors also
account for a much larger proportion of R&D outside the EU. Nevertheless,
the EU did record the highest growth in fixed capital investment. This represents
an important part of total corporate investment that also underpins investment
in innovation."