The FINANCIAL — Despite a steady increase in patent applications from European universities over time, only the University of Oxford and Imperial College London made it into the top 50 world ranking. Following Brexit, no university from an EU member state is included in the ranking anymore.
Among European institutions, three UK and two Swiss universities the way, highlighting the continuing challenges the European Union faces in translating academic research into successful commercial applications.
Globally, universities in the United States and China continue to dominate global patent activity, according to Institute for World Economy. Of the top 50 patenting universities in the world between 2020 and 2022, 19 are located in the United States and 18 in China.
The analysis uses patenting data from 866 universities across 31 European countries, as recorded in the PATSTAT Global database since 1980, and compares these to over 2,100 European universities that are not actively engaged in direct patenting activity. By analysing data on academic patent applications to track trends over time and incorporating institutional characteristics—such as students and academic staff numbers, geographical information, and financial records—the study offers a comprehensive assessment of the role European universities play in knowledge creation and innovation, as well as factors influencing these processes.
European integration vs. European competitiveness
The study also highlights a critical policy challenge: balancing the need to reduce regional disparities in innovation capacity across the EU, while enabling the continent’s leading research universities to compete with the world’s most innovative institutions.
“The absence of EU universities among the top performers is deeply worrying and does not bode well for European competitiveness in the future,” says Holger Görg, project leader of RETHINK-GSC and head of the research group “International Trade and Investment”at the Kiel Institute. “With trade wars looming both with the US and with China, the EU needs to act quickly and comprehensively: promote research collaboration with the UK after Brexit and support faster commercialisation of university research in Europe by cutting red tape and increasing funding.”
The study was conducted within the framework of RETHINK-GSC, an EU-funded research project led by the Kiel Institute.
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