Innovation and Growth: Ationale For An Nnovation Trategy
Innovation and Growth: Ationale For An Nnovation Trategy
Innovation and Growth: Ationale For An Nnovation Trategy
OECD 2007
No translation of this document may be made without written permission. Applications should be sent to [email protected].
Preface
Undoubtedly the capability to innovate and to bring innovation successfully to
market will be a crucial determinant of the global competitiveness of nations over
the coming decade. There is growing awareness among policymakers that innovative
activity is the main driver of economic progress and well-being as well as a potential
factor in meeting global challenges in domains such as the environment and health.
Not only has innovation moved to centre-stage in economic policy making, but there
is a realisation that a co-ordinated, coherent, whole-of-government approach is
required. Many OECD member countries have adopted national strategic roadmaps to foster innovation and enhance its economic impact. Even countries that
have generally refrained from active industrial policy in recent years now seek new
ways to improve the environment for innovation in order to boost productivity and
growth. The United States, for example, came forward with the Innovate America
strategy in 2005. The EUs Lisbon Agenda, initiated in 2000, has now been updated
and strengthened.
In addition to the rapid advances in scientific discovery and in general-purpose
technologies such as ICTs and biotechnology, the accelerating pace of innovation is
being driven by globalisation. These pervasive trends were picked up at the summit
of the G8 at Heiligendamm in June 2007 which identified research and innovation as
areas requiring high-level policy dialogue between the G8 members and major
emerging economies.
A shorter version of this document was submitted to the meeting of the OECD
Council at Ministerial level Innovation, Growth and Equity held in Paris in May
2007. It provided supporting evidence, based on the findings and recommendations
emerging from recent OECD work, to underpin the Ministerial discussions on how
policies should be updated to address the changing relationships between innovation
and national progress. At that meeting, Ministers asked the OECD to develop a
broad-ranging Innovation Strategy to build on existing work, address remaining
knowledge gaps, and above all provide a cross-disciplinary mutually-reinforcing
package of policy elements and recommendations to boost innovation performance.
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CHAPTER TITLE
Executive Summary
The challenge
Today, innovation performance is a crucial determinant of competitiveness and
national progress. Moreover, innovation is important to help address global
challenges, such as climate change and sustainable development. But despite the
importance of innovation, many OECD countries face difficulties in strengthening
performance in this area. Indeed, many OECD countries have seen little improvement in productivity performance in recent years despite the new opportunities
offered by globalisation and new technologies, especially the information and
communication technologies (ICT).
A reform agenda
Government policies can support innovation by continually reforming and
updating the regulatory and institutional framework within which innovative
activity takes place. In this context, reforms are needed to make public policy and
regulatory framework more conducive to innovation in a range of policy areas from
the general business environment especially in the services, particularly in the
network industries to international trade and international investment, financial
markets, labour markets, and education.
Governments can also play a more direct role in fostering innovation. Public
investment in science and basic research can play an important role in developing
ICT and other general-purpose technologies and, hence, in enabling further innovation. This highlights the importance of reforming the management and funding of
public investment in science and research, as well as public support to innovative
activity in the private sector. The latter calls for an appropriate mix of direct and
indirect instruments such as tax credits, direct support and well-designed publicprivate partnerships, support for innovative clusters and rigorous evaluation of such
public support.
In view of the changing environment for innovation, it is also important to
consider whether the current system of IPR rules and practices continues to
stimulate innovation while allowing access to knowledge. In certain cases the abuse
of the control with which IPR owners are endowed could hamper competition, fair
use and the diffusion of technology. However, regardless of issues related to the
flexibility of the IPR system, stronger efforts are needed to combat counterfeiting
and piracy, which are serious and growing problems.
Much of the rise in living standards is due to innovation this has been the case
since the Industrial Revolution. Today, innovative performance is a crucial factor in
determining competitiveness and national progress. Moreover, innovation is
important to help address global challenges, such as climate change and sustainable
development.
But it is the application of advances in technology, in conjunction with entrepreneurship and innovative approaches to the creation and delivery of goods and
services, which translates scientific and technological advances into more productive
economic activity. This results in economic growth if market structures and the
regulatory environment enable the more productive activities to expand. This said,
the innovative effort itself, including formal research and development, remains the
sine qua non of growth.
Evidence suggests that innovative effort is on the rise as a share of economic
activity. Investment in knowledge has grown more rapidly than investment in
machinery and equipment since the mid-1990s in most OECD countries, and has
surpassed the latter in a few countries such as Finland and the United States (OECD,
2005c). R&D intensity of the economy has risen significantly in a number of
smaller OECD countries, but remains more or less unchanged in the OECD area as
a whole since 1995, and important cross-country differentials remain (Figure 1).
But intellectual assets taken as a whole a concept seeking to aggregate
measures of human capital, R&D and capacity to conduct it, patent valuations as well
as intangible assets such as brand value or firm-specific knowledge are rapidly
becoming the key to value creation through a number of channels. Improvements in
the skill composition of labour play an important role in productivity growth.
Studies suggest that investment in R&D is associated with high rates of return. And
investments in software have also contributed significantly to business performance
and economic growth, accounting for as much as one-third of the contribution of ICT
(information and communications technology) capital to GDP growth since 1995 in
Denmark, France, the Netherlands, Sweden and the United States (OECD, 2007a).
OECD 2007
2005
5.0
4.5
4.0
3.5
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2.5
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OECD 2007
30%
25%
20%
15%
10%
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
High-tech
Medium/high-tech
Medium/low-tech
Low-tech
2004
OECD 2007
While these developments make it even more urgent for OECD countries to move
up the value chain, many of them face difficulties in strengthening innovation
performance. For example, progress along these lines under the aegis of the Lisbon
strategy of the European Union has been slow. Nevertheless, the most recent
evidence suggests that the renewed Lisbon Strategy may have had some success in
helping to improve the European Union's performance in innovation and R&D.
Earlier OECD analysis (Sheehan & Wyckoff, 2003) has shown the economic and
structural implications of policy initiatives to increase the R&D intensity of the
economy, which is one of the key elements of the Lisbon strategy, and underlined
the difficulty inherent in using R&D targeting as an indicator where success requires
implementing policies across a broad range of domains, from R&D funding and
entrepreneurship to immigration and education, to product, financial and labour
market regulation.
Indeed, recent OECD analysis has shown that increases in R&D intensity and
innovation are driven by a wide range of factors (OECD, 2006b), including:
Reduction of anti-competitive product market regulations, which stimulates
business R&D and strengthens the incentives to innovate. Moreover, a low
level of restrictions on foreign direct investment is important, as it can
improve cross-border knowledge transfers.
Stable macroeconomic conditions and low real interest rates which encourage
the growth of innovation activity by creating a stable and low-cost environment for investment in innovation.
Availability of internal and external finance.
An expansion in public research, which can support business sector research,
although expanding both at the same time will require efforts to raise the
supply of human resources.
Fiscal incentives, which can be effective in raising R&D, especially when firms
face financial constraints. Tax relief for private R&D is often found to provide a
stronger stimulus to business R&D than direct government support. This may
be because much direct support for R&D is aimed at meeting government
objectives, such as energy security or defence, and not at stimulating private
R&D.
Openness to foreign R&D, which is associated with higher productivity growth,
especially when domestic R&D investment and capabilities are also high.
OECD 2007
1995-2000
5%
4%
3%
2%
1%
0%
re
e
Un Ir ce
ite ela
d nd
St
a
Sw tes
ed
F i en
nl
an
Un
ite J d
d ap
K
a
N ing n
ew d
Ze om
al
A u and
st
ra
F r lia
a
G nc
er e
m
a
Ca ny
na
B e da
lg
iu
m
Ne Sp
t h ai
n
e
Sw rlan
it z ds
er
la
n
Au d
s
P o t r ia
rt
De uga
nm l
ar
k
It a
ly
-1%
Note: Owing to data availability constraints, exact dates for the most recent period differ for some countries.
Source: OECD Productivity Database.
OECD 2007
11
USPTO
applications
200
180
EPO applications
160
140
JPO applications
120
100
80
1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005
Source: OECD Patent Database and USPTO, EPO and JPO Annual Reports.
1.
The US Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) of 1998, European enforcement directive of 2006. Databases
have been the object of an ad-hoc IP law in the EU (1999).
OECD 2007
220
US
200
Germany
180
160
140
120
100
1991
1993
1995
1997
1999
2001
2003
2005
Note: Data for Japan are adjusted to take account of a break in the series in 1997.
Source: WIPO, Statistics on Trademarks, Online data, www.wipo.int/ipstats/en/statistics/marks/
The key policy question remains how to strike an appropriate balance between
providing incentives and rewards to innovators and providing access to new
knowledge for users. Over the recent past the balance has been shifting more in
favour of right holders, at least partly in reaction to changing conditions but also as a
deliberate move towards pro-IPR policies. These policies have resulted in certain
achievements, such as the progress of technology transfers from universities in
countries which have promoted patenting of public research results; the expansion
of the biotech sector, which would have been hardly possible without patents on
genetic inventions; and the multiplication of venture capital based start ups, which
often rely on IPR.
As the policy, legal and economic environment are still evolving, the situation in
the field of IPR is not stabilised. Public debates have turned around the efficiency
and distributive effects of consolidating IPR regimes. If strong IPR are needed in
order to give incentives for creative activities, they should not on the other hand
endow the holder with such broad rights as to block all access to new knowledge.
Difficulties have notably emerged in the following areas:
OECD 2007
See OECD (2007) Going for Growth 2007, Chapter 5 for a recent update of evidence.
OECD 2007
13
2.0
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
Fr
an
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m
an
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1. Data are the average increase in annual business-sector productivity over the period 1995 to 2003 given an easing in the stance of
regulation to the least restrictive of competition in the non-manufacturing sectors in OECD countries in 1995. The business-sector
results are calculated as weighted averages of the sectoral productivity increases using value-added weights.
Source: Conway, P. et al. (2006).
regulatory framework (such as in telecommunications and broadcasting). Forthcoming work in conjunction with the OECD Ministerial Meeting on the future of the
Internet economy3 will develop policy options for appropriate regulatory reform to
maintain the future Internet as a trusted, secure and reliable medium underpinning
social and economic development.
Figure 7. ICT investment as share of total investment, 2000-2005*
* Average of 2000-2005 (or latest year)
30
25
20
15
10
5
Ire
la
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re
e
N ce
or
w
ay
Sp
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nd
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st
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nl
an
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at
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Reform of financial markets can also boost innovation and growth, including by
helping to reduce the financing gaps faced by some innovative small firms. Empirical
literature suggests that industrial sectors that are most dependent on external finance
tend to grow faster in countries that have better developed financial systems.
Furthermore, the sectors that tend to be the most dependent on external financial
sources are generally the ones that invest the most in R&D (e.g. pharmaceuticals,
electronic equipment and refined petroleum products).4
3.
4.
OECD 2007
15
0.3
0.2
0.1
D
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ni
te Swma
d e rk
Ki d
n e
U Ko gdo n
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a
N
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et r
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a
Sp nd
Fr ain
a
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s ny
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Ze str
a ia
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ov l y
ze
ch P akia
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u
G bli
re c
ec
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0.0
Early stages
Expansion
1. 2001 data.
2. 2002 data.
Source: OECD, Venture capital database. Quoted in OECD (2007d) Science, Technology and Industry Scoreboard 2007, forthcoming.
OECD 2007
17
-1
OECD 2007
Innovation also relies heavily on the creation of basic knowledge, through both
education and science. A well-performing and broadly accessible education system
facilitates the adoption and diffusion of innovation.
The contribution of education and human capital accumulation to economic
growth is well documented. Some of this occurs through science and innovation.
Investment in the education and training of researchers and other highly skilled
workers is a major factor in determining the contribution that scientific research can
make to scientific progress and innovation. Moreover, human capital is a key factor
in the adoption of new technologies and the introduction of innovative practices.
Much of the latter operates through growth in MFP arising from improvements in
managerial practices, organisational change and inventions per se. Growth of skills
and competencies embodied in workers and managers or human capital play a
fundamental role in this process. Data available for half the number of OECD
countries depicted in Figure 9 shows that growth in output per employed person is
partly attributable to increases in the human capital of those in employment. The
chart displays the impact of changes in the average human capital of workers on
growth in cyclically-adjusted GDP per hour worked, including changes in average
years of formal education, used here as a proxy for changes in the quality of labour.5
Creating, developing and diffusing new products and processes requires strong
science and technology (S&T) skills as well as many non-research soft and entrepreneurial skills. There is an increasing emphasis on policy issues related to the
availability of highly skilled labour, in particular highly skilled human resources in
science and technology. Strong S&T skills facilitate the uptake and use of new technologies which drives innovation throughout the economy. This places a premium
on both the quantity as well as the quality of highly skilled labour in the economy.
But as, innovative activity may arise from any part of the production process, not
only from the R&D lab, softer or more intangible skills such as entrepreneurial
ability, communications skills, adaptability etc., also contribute strongly to innovation, especially in services and in organisational innovation. As a result, in many of
the successful education systems there is now less emphasis on the reproduction of
subject matter knowledge, which develops skills that are easiest to digitise,
automatise and offshore, and more focus on teaching and evaluating skills in the
context of real-world complexity, such as expert thinking the ability to structure
problems, complex communication , learning strategies and self-concept.
Education policy makers are paying increasing attention to innovation outcomes,
and there is increasing emphasis to move towards a school environment which is
less elitist, less compartmentalised between training for theoretical and practical
understanding, and geared towards making a vast majority of students successful.
There is greater scrutiny of the efficiency of education systems throughout the
OECD, and a greater willingness to utilise international comparisons of outcomes in
this area. As distinct from more spending in education as such, good education
outcomes which can support a more innovative economy involve structural shifts in
the way education is delivered, from uniformity in the system to individualising
5.
For a more detailed analysis see OECD (2005a) Education at a Glance, Section A.10.
OECD 2007
OECD 2007
19
All OECD countries provide public support to promote innovative activity in the
private sector. The effectiveness of such support can often be improved, by
identifying an appropriate mix of direct and indirect instruments such as tax credits,
direct support and well-designed public-private partnerships, support for innovative
clusters and rigorous evaluation to ensure that public support achieves its goals in
an efficient manner.
Direct support to business innovation in the form of competitive grants or
subsidised or guaranteed loans remains important even if use of indirect schemes
such as tax credits has tended to increase. Recent reviews of innovation policy have
prompted reforms in countries such as Austria, Finland, the Netherlands, Norway
and the United Kingdom. Several countries with numerous small programmes have
recently attempted to streamline support and focus programmes on barriers to the
innovation process, especially in the area of networking and co-operation (OECD,
2006d).
R&D tax concessions are extensively used by OECD countries as an indirect way
of encouraging business R&D expenditures (Figure 10), on the understanding that
R&D expenditures have benefits that cannot be fully appropriated by the investing
firms so that firms are reluctant to invest in socially optimal levels of R&D. R&D tax
credits can potentially benefit all firms engaged in R&D, although special arrangements may be needed for small innovative firms with little or no taxable income. Tax
incentives are more flexible as regards the research to be undertaken and leave it up
to firms to direct the funding. Direct support enables more focus in government
intervention, and can be linked to public policy priorities in the area of science and
innovation. The effectiveness of both instruments depends heavily on their design
and implementation. International experiences with tax incentives for R&D show
that they can, if well designed, induce additional private R&D efforts. Direct support
is also important to foster innovation, but needs to be based on a competitive and
merit-based selection of deserving projects that can provide high social returns.
In both cases, a careful evaluation of policies to support business innovation is
needed to ensure that the policies are effective and achieve their goals.
OECD 2007
21
Successful experience in promoting rapid advances in the science and technology that underlie industrial innovation in strategic fields suggests that relevant
R&D programmes need to involve industry closely in their funding and management.
Public-private partnerships for innovation promote co-operation between the public
sector (government agencies or laboratories, universities) and the private sector in
undertaking joint research projects or in building knowledge infrastructures. They
fill gaps in the science and innovation systems and increase the leverage of public
support to business R&D through cost and risk sharing. Key challenges in the public
sphere - delivery of health care, social services for ageing populations, environmental
protection, sustainable transport, on-line security and privacy offer promising
opportunities to harness the creative capabilities of the private sector via publicprivate partnerships to achieve productivity gains and service improvements that
can benefit society. Programmes of this kind should be directed to enhancing focus
and mass in excellent research and valorisation of research, be it in innovation/
technology or in knowledge that is useful for solving societal issues.
Figure 10. Rate of tax subsidies for USD 1 of R&D, large firms and SMEs, 2005
0.5
0.4
Large firms
SMEs
0.3
0.2
0.1
0.0
G
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ain
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OECD 2007
OECD 2007
23
100
80
60
40
20
0
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators online database, accessed in April 2007.
OECD 2007
1995
2000
2005
Regardless of issues related to the flexibility of the IPR systems, stronger efforts
are needed to combat counterfeiting and piracy. The problem is seen both by
governments and industry as growing in complexity as there are potentially serious
health and safety consequences associated with an expansion in the quantity and
range of fake products being marketed internationally. There is also increasing
concern that criminal networks (including organised and terrorist groups) are the
principal beneficiaries of counterfeiting and piracy activities, with the proceeds from
their activities being used to finance a range of illicit activities.
Governments and industry have both stepped up their efforts to fight against the
illicit activities. With the support of industry, the Council agreed in mid-2005 to
launch the OECD project on counterfeiting and piracy. Phase 1 of the project, which
focuses on tangible products that infringe trademarks, copyrights, patents and
design rights has found that:
The scope of products being counterfeited or pirated is broad and expanding.
There has been a disturbing expansion spreading out from luxury products
(such as upscale watches, designer clothing and expensive perfume) to
common articles such as food and drink (candy/sweets, drink, conserved
vegetables), pharmaceutical products (treatments for cancer, HIV, malaria,
prostate and infectious diseases), personal care items (toothpaste, shampoo),
household products, toys, cigarettes, and automotive parts (engine parts,
brakes, tires), to name a few. Infringing products are being produced and
consumed in virtually all economies, with Asia emerging as the single largest
producing region.
Although the overall magnitude of counterfeiting and piracy cannot be
measured effectively, information collected from enforcement authorities
suggests that up to USD 200 billion of international trade could be in
counterfeit/pirated products, this being more than the GDP of about 150 (out
of 185) economies in the world. As a large amount of counterfeit/pirated
goods never enters international trade the overall total amount of counterfeited and pirated goods can be assumed to be significantly higher.
Counterfeiting and piracy have effects on (i) consumers, whose health and
safety are oftentimes put at risk, (ii) rights holders, whose sales decline,
(iii) governments, which suffer lost tax revenues, while facing the costs
associated with fighting counterfeiting and piracy and (iv) society at large, in
light of the resources that are channelled to the criminal networks that are
often behind counterfeiting and piracy activities, and, last but not least (v) the
innovation environment, as it diverts creativity, entrepreneurship and incentives
away from genuine innovation.
OECD 2007
OECD 2007
25
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
Note: Patent counts are based on the earliest priority date, the residence of the inventor and fractional counts.
Source: OECD, Patent Database, September 2006.
Implementing reforms to foster innovation may also prove difficult. Some of the
required reforms may affect vested interests, such as in universities and scientific
institutions, as well as business sheltered from competition, benefiting from public
support or confronted by technology-induced structural change. Strong political
leadership and efforts to develop a clear understanding by the various stakeholders
of the problems and of the solutions including the costs they involve can all
help to communicate the need for reform and foster acceptance.
As can be seen from the following list of references, not only has the OECD been
working on various aspects of innovation and growth for many years, but by early
2007 there was new ongoing work in a range of groundbreaking areas such as
measuring the determinants of innovation, its outcomes at the enterprise level, and
understanding how so-called open innovation models work.
Not only has innovation moved to centre-stage in economic policy making, but
there is a realisation that a co-ordinated, coherent, whole-of-government approach
is required. Many OECD member countries have adopted national strategic roadmaps
to foster innovation and enhance its economic impact.
In addition to the rapid advances in scientific discovery and in general-purpose
technologies such as ICTs and biotechnology, the accelerating pace of innovation is
being driven by globalisation. These pervasive trends were picked up at the summit
of the G8 at Heiligendamm in June 2007 which identified research and innovation as
areas requiring high-evel policy dialogue between the G8 members and major
emerging economies.
It is in this context that the meeting of the OECD Council at Ministerial Level, held
in May 2007, asked the OECD to develop a broad-ranging Innovation Strategy. The
OECD Innovation Strategy will add to the existing body of OECD work on innovation
by (i) providing a cross-disciplinary mutually-reinforcing package of policy elements
and recommendations to boost innovation performance, including non-technological
innovation, both generally applicable and country-specific. This will include the
identification of good policy practices, and where appropriate, policy guidelines. It
will (ii) provide a framework that could be used to monitor and review the innovation
environment and the performance of the innovation system. It will also (iii) enhance
existing mechanisms and forums for international discussion and co-operation,
including strengthened dialogue, especially with emerging economies and other
important stakeholders. Moreover, it will (iv) provide analysis clarifying the links
between the policy domains of a comprehensive strategy, such as those between
innovation and entrepreneurship and how innovation contributes towards economic,
OECD 2007
27
Last but not least, a catalyst for globalisation and innovation, ICTs (notably, the
Internet) have become a fundamental component of the global economic infrastructure. Ensuring that the Internet is a positive agent for economic and social
outcomes is the focus of OECD work as well as a Ministerial meeting on the Future of
the Internet Economy, to be held in Korea in June 2008, a report on which will be
made to Ministers in 2009.
OECD 2007
References
Conway, P., D. De Rosa, G. Nicoletti and F. Steiner (2006) Regulation, Competition and
Productivity Convergence, OECD Economics Department Working Papers, No. 509.
www.olis.oecd.org/olis/2006doc.nsf/linkto/ECO-WKP(2006)37.
OECD (2007a) Creating Value from Intellectual Assets, Policy Brief, February.
OECD (2007b) Synthesis Report on Global Value Chains, forthcoming.
OECD (2007c) Going for Growth 2007.
OECD (2007d) Science, Technology and Industry Scoreboard 2007, forthcoming
OECD (2006a) Compendium of Productivity Indicators 2006.
OECD (2006b) Going for Growth 2006.
OECD (2006c), Main Science and Technology Indicators (MSTI).
OECD (2006d) Science, Technology and Industry Outlook 2006.
OECD (2006e), Innovation in Energy Technology: Comparing National Innovation
Systems at the Sectoral Level.
OECD (2005a) Education at a Glance.
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