The 2023 edition of the European Innovation Scoreboard and the bi-yearly edition of the Regional Innovation Scoreboard published today showcase that, despite the recent crises, EU Member States and their regions keep improving their innovation performance.
The European Innovation Scoreboard 2023 highlights a substantial improvement in the innovation performance of approximately 8.5% since 2016, confirming the EU's commitment to fostering a culture of innovation. The innovation performance of 25 countries improved during this period, although at a slower pace in the more recent years, and that 20 Member States experienced a significant rise in their innovation capabilities over the past year, while only seven observed a decline. Nevertheless, countries with less strong innovation systems tend to improve less rapidly than the EU average.
The Regional Innovation Scoreboard also reports a rise in innovation performance for most of the regions in the EU since 2016. Even though innovative regions tend to be situated within the most innovative countries, some regional ‘pockets of excellence' are found in countries with relatively lower innovation performance.
At the global level, the EU is still performing slightly better than China and is closing the performance gap with Australia, although the gap with Canada, the Republic of Korea, and the United States has expanded.
Key findings
Based on their scores, Members States fall into four performance groups: Innovation Leaders (performance is above 125% of the EU average), Strong innovators (between 100% and 125% of the EU average), Moderate innovators (between 70% and 100% of the EU average) and Emerging innovators (below 70% of the EU average). Denmark is the new top innovator, while Sweden, which had topped the board in the last few years, is coming second. Other Innovation Leaders are Finland, the Netherlands, and Belgium.Figure 1: Performance of EU Member State's innovation systems
In comparison to last year's edition, the distribution of Member States across performance groups has stayed broadly stable. Hungary progressed to a higher performance group and became a Moderate innovator, while innovation performance has decreased in France, and Luxembourg since 2016.
In particular:
- Austria, Germany, Luxembourg, Ireland, Cyprus, and France are Strong innovators, performing above the EU average.
- Estonia, Slovenia, Czechia, Italy, Spain, Malta, Portugal, Lithuania, Greece and Hungary are Moderate innovators.
- Croatia, Slovakia, Poland, Latvia, Bulgaria and Romania are Emerging innovators.
At the regional level, innovation performance has increased for 211 regions out of the total of 239 regions over the period since 2016, as shown in the Regional Innovation Scoreboard 2023. The most innovative region in Europe is Hovedstaden in Denmark, followed by Helsinki-Uusimaa in Finland, and Oberbayern in Germany. Stockholm in Sweden is in fourth place, and Berlin in Germany is in fifth place.
Despite the progress in innovation, the EU's innovation divide persists and is predominantly shaped by geographic concentrations. While Innovation Leaders and most Strong innovators are predominantly located in Northern and Western Europe, many of the Moderate and Emerging innovators are in Southern and Eastern Europe.
This divide emphasises the need for targeted efforts to bridge the innovation gap and foster equitable growth across the EU, which is one of the goals of the New European Innovation Agenda, adopted in July 2022. Through strategic initiatives like the Deep Tech Talent Initiative, the Innovation Talent Platform, and the Regional Innovation Valleys, the EU aims to foster deep tech innovation and promote a start-up culture. By investing in deep tech talent, fostering innovation ecosystems, and leveraging regional strengths, countries or regions can drive technological advancement, and maintain a competitive edge in the global innovation landscape.
Background
Since 2001, the European Innovation Scoreboard has been the benchmark for analysing innovation performance across EU countries, European neighbours, and global competitors. The Regional Innovation Scoreboard provides a comparative assessment of the research and innovation performance across 239 regions in 22 EU Member States, Norway, Serbia, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. Cyprus, Estonia, Latvia, Luxembourg, and Malta are included at the country level. Both scoreboards provide a comprehensive assessment of national and regional innovation strengths and weaknesses, empowering countries to identify areas for improvement. Accompanied by an interactive tool, the Scoreboards offer customized comparisons, visualizing country profiles, showcasing relative strengths, weaknesses, and trends, and exploring correlations between indicators.
The European Innovation Scoreboard highlights the commitment of the EU and its Member States to fostering innovation rooted in excellence, competitiveness, openness, and talent. It serves as a guide for shaping policies that amplify innovation across Europe, while keeping pace with the rapidly evolving global landscape.
For More Information
European Innovation Scoreboard (EIS) 2023
European Innovation Scoreboard 2023 – Executive summary
Questions and Answers on the European Innovation Scoreboard (EIS) 2023
EIS 2023 – Annex B (performance per indicator)
EIS 2023 – EU countries and neighbouring countries database
EIS 2023 – EU and global competitors database
Technical note on the gender perspective in innovation
Feasibility study - European start-up scoreboard
Regional Innovation Scoreboard (RIS) 2023
Quote(s)
The 2023 edition of the European Innovation Scoreboard shows a substantial improvement in innovation performance. It highlights the importance of a European Innovation Ecosystem, with Horizon Europe as a powerful enabler. Something that can help us champion excellence and provide support to leading researchers and innovators and promote a start-up culture. This will ultimately strengthen European competitiveness for us to keep pace in a global landscape.
Margrethe Vestager, Executive Vice-President for a Europe Fit for the Digital Age - 06/07/2023
To remain competitive and create quality jobs in a decarbonised EU economy, we must strengthen our domestic capacities. The EU should be a leader in the markets of the future, and this requires investments in cutting-edge innovative products and clean technologies. We should shelter Europe’s supplies by boosting the resilience of global value chains. Actions like the Green Deal Industrial Plan, the Chips Act and recent proposals for a Net-Zero Industry Act and a Critical Raw Materials Act aim to transform our industrial landscape and will create massive opportunities for growth and sustainable competitiveness.
Thierry Breton, Commissioner for Internal Market - 06/07/2023
Details
- Publication date
- 6 July 2023
- Author
- Representation in Cyprus