Why in the news?
- Global Innovation Index 2025 was released by World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO).
Global Innovation Index
- What is it?:
- The Global Innovation Index (GII) is an annual ranking of countries’ innovation capacity and output.
- First published in 2007, currently released by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) in partnership with Cornell University and INSEAD.
- Serves as a tool for policymakers, business leaders, and researchers to evaluate innovation ecosystems.
- Structure of the Index: The GII framework is divided into two sub-indices–
- Innovation Input Sub-Index (institutions, human capital & research, infrastructure, market sophistication, business sophistication).
- Innovation Output Sub-Index (knowledge & technology outputs, creative outputs).
- Indicators: There are 7 pillars for the GII
- Institutions: Political, regulatory, business environment.
- Human Capital & Research: Education, R&D, researchers.
- Infrastructure: ICT, energy, ecological sustainability.
- Market Sophistication: Credit, investment, trade, market scale.
- Business Sophistication: Knowledge workers, innovation linkages, knowledge absorption.
- Knowledge & Technology Outputs: Patents, publications, high-tech exports, productivity.
- Creative Outputs: Intangible assets, creative goods & services, online creativity.
- Global Rankings:
- Switzerland, Sweden and the United States are the top three performers.
- India is ranked 38th out of 139 economies.
- India retains its position as the top performer among the countries in Central & Southern Asia.
- India is at the top among the lower-middle-income group in GII 2025.
- Significance:
- Encourages evidence-based policymaking for innovation-led growth.
- Highlights strengths and weaknesses of national innovation ecosystems.
- Acts as a benchmark for SDGs, sustainability, and digital transformation.
- India uses GII insights to support initiatives like Start-up India, Digital India, Atal Innovation Mission, IndiaAI Mission.
- Challenges for India:
- Low GERD (Gross Expenditure on R&D).
- Private sector contribution to R&D is limited compared to developed economies.
- Brain drain & limited international patent filings.
- Digital divide & inadequate industry-academia linkages.
- Way Forward:
- Increase R&D spending to 2% of GDP (NITI Aayog target).
- Strengthen university-industry collaboration.
- Promote inclusive innovation (rural, grassroots).
- Invest in frontier technologies (AI, green hydrogen, quantum).
- Enhance IPR ecosystem and ease of patenting.