The World Intellectual Property Organization's (WIPO) latest Global Innovation Index ranks 131 economies on their innovation performance.
Top of the pile? Switzerland, which also took top spot last year. Indeed, it's the 10th consecutive year it's come first.
Switzerland scores well across the index's seven areas and is particularly strong in areas such as high R&D expenditure and for having an innovative business sector.
It also ranks highly in its quality of innovation - second only to the United States. This is thanks to the "high-quality of its universities and scientific publications," but also the efforts to goes to to "internationalize its inventions".
The index is based on two sub-indices - the Innovation Input Sub-Index and the Innovation Output Sub-Index. The former looks at the elements of national economies that go into enabling innovative activities - such as research and development - while the latter looks at the results of these activities, for example creative goods and services.
An average of these two is then taken to give the overall score, with each given equal weighting. You can see a breakdown of these sub-indices below.
WIPO is not the only organization to measure innovation. The World Economic Forum's Global Competitiveness Report also looks at economies' innovation capability.
Germany topped that in the 2019 edition of the report, with the US in second place and Switzerland third.
With different methodologies and approaches, direct comparisons are difficult - but across the top 10, the two are closely matched.
The Global Innovation Index's authors warn that the COVID-19 crisis "hit the innovation landscape at a time when innovation was flourishing".
They ask, with the global economic impact and hit on growth, will the determination remain to foster innovation?
In particular, the report asks 'who will finance innovation?' With emergency relief measures not directly targeted at financing innovation - with the exception of health - the report calls for support for innovation to broaden out, once the pandemic is under control.
"It is crucial that support for innovation becomes more broad and that it is conducted in a countercyclical way — i.e., as business innovation expenditures slump, governments strive to counteract that effect with their own expenditure boosts to innovation, even in the face of higher public debt."
https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2020/09/these-are-the-worlds-most-innovat...