Chemical R&D Powers the U.S. Innovation Engine

  • 2009
  • Concept Map
  • Exhibit map
The Council for Chemical Research (CCR) commissioned expert economists to conduct a two-phase study on the quantitative impact of research and development (R&D) in the chemical sciences. Using patent and scientific literature, a 20-year timeline from basic research to market was determined. Furthermore, the experts identified two major feedback cycles: (I) chemical industry innovation is directly linked to federally-supported foundational research and (II) the $1 billion federal investment is leveraged by industry investment of about $5 billion dollars for invention development and technology commercialization. Experts also calculated that every dollar invested in R&D by the chemical industry over the past twenty years has generated two dollars in increased operating income, a 17% return on investment after taxes. In 2005, researchers from the Los Alamos National Laboratory examined the macroecomonic impacts of the $10 billion chemical industry income on gross national product (GNP) and jobs. Using the REMI Policy Insight model they determined a GNP multiplier of 4 which, applied to the industry operating income of $10 billion, yields $40 billion in GNP; it also creates 600,000 new jobs, and roughly $8 billion in additional tax revenues each year, some of which is invested in chemical R&D, closing the cycle. The original map appears in “Measure for Measure: Chemical R&D Powers the U.S. Innovation Engine”sponsored and published by CCR (2005).

Council for Chemical Research. 2009. Chemical R&D Powers the U.S. Innovation Engine. Washington, DC. Courtesy of the Council for Chemical Research. In Katy Börner & Elisha F. Hardy (Eds.), 5th Iteration (2009): Science Maps for Science Policy Makers, Places and Spaces: Mapping Science. http://scimaps.org (accessed 5/21/2010).