Clarivate Annual G20 Scorecard Report Highlights Research Performance of the World's Leading Economies
Clarivate Plc has unveiled its latest report analyzing the research performance of G20 nations, highlighting their contributions to COVID-19 research. The report, The Annual G20 Scorecard – Research Performance 2020, emphasizes that G20 countries produce 81% of global GDP and represent 92% of global R&D spending. It notes a surge in research output in member nations like Australia and China, contrasting with a decline in the United States. The findings aim to assist policymakers and researchers in tracking progress as the G20 prepares for its upcoming summit in Riyadh.
- G20 nations contribute significantly to COVID-19 research, showcasing their robust research capacities.
- Research output in Australia has doubled over the past decade, driven by international collaboration.
- China boasts a large research workforce and significant R&D investment, contributing greatly to global research output.
- Germany invests over 3% of its GDP in R&D, outperforming many EU counterparts.
- United States research output is declining despite high investment, now below the G20 average per researcher.
Web of Science data analyzes G20 nations as a driver for innovation plus a special analysis of members' contribution to recent COVID-19 research
LONDON, Nov. 11, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Clarivate Plc (NYSE:CCC), a global leader in providing trusted information and insights to accelerate the pace of innovation, today launched a new report which examines the research performance of the G20 with a visual comparative snapshot for each member nation. It also includes a special analysis of the G20 members' contribution to recent COVID-19 research as indexed in the Web of Science™ research publication and citation index.
The report, The Annual G20 Scorecard – Research Performance 2020 has been created by the Institute for Scientific Information™ at Clarivate ahead of this year's G20 Summit, which will be hosted virtually by Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on November 21-22. It includes both a written summary and a host of graphs and exhibits that highlight the research performance of Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, United Kingdom and the United States.
The G20 is a group of 19 leading economies, with the EU as the additional 20th member. Collectively the 19 countries of the G20 represent two-thirds of the world's population, produce
Our report shows that – due to their relatively developed research bases – G20 nations have been the most active participants in COVID-19 research, and it has been particularly relevant for the highly populated G20 member nations which also report some of the highest absolute number of reported cases: United States, India, Brazil and Russia.
Jonathan Adams, Director at the Institute for Scientific Information at Clarivate and a co-author of this annual report said: "The G20 meeting is one of the world's few forums for international co-operation this year and expectations are rightly high that the expertise and resources of its members should play a champion's role in addressing the pandemic challenge. This should produce a rapid understanding of the biological issues, the health impacts and responses, the social outcomes and the economic and societal implications of a pandemic. This year especially, these scorecards will help policymakers, observers and reporters to track, applaud and critique the research progress of the G20 member nations."
Researchers across the globe have been engaged in basic, experimental and clinical studies to understand the virus and, ultimately produce a vaccine and/or a cure. The published literature has rapidly increased at an unprecedented scale and through the examination of the text in the titles, abstracts and keywords of more than 18,000 articles and reviews indexed in the Web of Science since January 2020, ISI identified clusters of COVID-19 research topics and analyzed each G20 nation's contribution as well as the topical spread across the group.
The national research profiles within the report are selective, highlighting chosen topics of current policy interest that identify good signals of the health of the research base for each member country of the G20. Key factors that contribute to impactful research are laid out for each nation in the report and benchmarked.
Some key findings include:
- In Australia output has doubled in a decade and continues to rise, driven by exceptional international collaboration.
- China boasts an enormous research workforce and a large volume of investment (more than two million researchers, GERD over
2% GDP) and patents/BERD is twice that of any other G20 country. - In Germany investment is higher than EU neighbors, with GERD over
3% of GDP. Output per researcher is around G20 average. However, only28% of researchers are female and Open Access is below G20 average. - In Indonesia research output is small and domestic output is only
20% of the total, but volume has trebled since 2010, in all disciplines. - For researchers in Mexico, citation impact is relatively good in all areas although output is only just above G20 median. Productivity per GERD is well above G20 average, so output has not been constrained by consistently low government investment.
- There is consistently high Open Access across disciplines in South Africa and the country has the second highest frequency of female researchers (
43% ). - For the United Kingdom, the share of papers in the global top
10% is the highest in the G20 and the Impact Profile shows that the domestic research base performs well above group average. International collaboration is exceptionally high, and rising, for such a large economy. The number of female researchers (39% ) is above G20 average. - In the United States, although investment is high, output is declining, and output/researcher has fallen below the G20 average.
Joel Haspel, SVP Strategy, Science at Clarivate said: "The world's most prosperous economies are also among the most innovative and that innovation is driven first and foremost by research. The Institute for Scientific Information is uniquely placed to analyze and report on the comparative health of the research landscape for each G20 nation, setting Web of Science data alongside other key metrics on people, finance and patenting alongside each member's contribution to the recent papers addressing the pandemic."
The full report is freely available here: https://clarivate.com/webofsciencegroup/campaigns/the-annual-2020-scorecard-research-performance-2020
Notes to editors:
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About Clarivate
Clarivate™ is a global leader in providing solutions to accelerate the lifecycle of innovation. Our bold mission is to help customers solve some of the world's most complex problems by providing actionable information and insights that reduce the time from new ideas to life-changing inventions in the areas of science and intellectual property. We help customers discover, protect and commercialize their inventions using our trusted subscription and technology-based solutions coupled with deep domain expertise. For more information, please visit clarivate.com.
About the Institute for Scientific Information
The Institute for Scientific Information (ISI)™ at Clarivate has pioneered the organization of the world's research information for more than half a century. Today it remains committed to promoting integrity in research whilst improving the retrieval, interpretation and utility of scientific information and maintains the knowledge corpus upon which the Web of Science™ index and related information and analytical content and services are built. It disseminates that knowledge externally through events, conferences and publications whilst conducting primary research to sustain, extend and improve the knowledge base. For more information, please visit https://clarivate.com/webofsciencegroup/solutions/isi-institute-for-scientific-information/
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