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OCR for page 332
332 TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER SYSTEMS IN THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY
management and substantial autonomy of the institutes, which are prerequisites
for flexible adaptation to the needs of the research market. Another element is
the direct linkage of the level of institutional funding to success in contract re-
search, which is a major incentive for market orientation and entrepreneurial
behavior.
Furthermore, the Fraunhofer model builds on a balanced mixture of the three
sources of support: institutional funding, public projects, and private contracts.
On the one hand, a higher share of institutional funding would imply a decreasing
interest of the institutes in industrial contracts, and thus a diminished orientation
toward industrial needs. On the other hand, a considerable decrease of public
funding would reduce scientific competence and call the institutes' transfer func-
tion into question. The institutional linkage to universities is another vital ele-
ment in maintaining a high standard of scientific competence.
In the German debate on research policy, success with industrial contracts is
often seen as the defining feature of the Fraunhofer model, and the close linkage
to science is overlooked. Both elements, however, are important to guarantee
effective technology transfer in the long run (see also Meyer-Krahmer, 1996~.
Therefore, managing the balance between scientific and technological compe-
tence is a major challenge for the FhG, which is met by regular control of all
elements of technology transfer for each institute. In the present situation of
scarce public funds, major problems could arise from further reduction of institu-
tional funds, and public projects. At the same time, other public or semipublic
research institutions such as universities or national research centers might be
urged to carry out more contract research, which could lead to a growing compe-
tition for industrial funds. In such a situation, the FhG would not become obso-
lete because of its high specific competencies in many areas of applied research,
but its role in the German research landscape would be quite different.
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER BY INDUSTRIAL R&D CONSORTIA
Federation of Industrial Research Associations
STRUCTURE AND TASKS
It is a long-standing tradition for German SMEs to be linked together in an
industrial research association. Such an association functions as the backbone of
a special industry, enabling its members to cooperate and coordinate joint inter-
ests. Today, 106 research associations that represent around 50,000 companies
and own 68 collective research institutes are joined under the umbrella organiza-
tion of the AiF (Arbeitsgemeinschaft industrieller Forschungsvereinigungen
"Otto con Guericke "I. The AiF is a product of 1950s West Germany: a reemerg-
ing landscape of research units at universities, independent institutions, and in-
dustrial research associations, focusing on industrially applicable research. The
OCR for page 333
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER IN GERMANY
333
Ministry of Economics, which was very interested in efficient and applicable
research, decided that a coordinating agency was needed. In 1954, private indus-
try set up the AiF in order to fill this gap.
The federal government was interested in channeling public funds through
one efficient, mediating umbrella organization. Therefore, in 1954, the AiF ob-
tained responsibility for 20 industrial research associations. Industrial coopera-
tive research has always been the core competence of the AiF, but the federation
has broadened its authority by obtaining jurisdiction over the administration of
the funds of three of the most important government programs for the promotion
of R&D in SMEs, which include contract R&D, R&D subsidies, and subsidies
for R&D personnel. The major aims of the AiF are as follows (Geimer and
Geimer, 1981~:
to finance cooperative research projects originating in the member asso
. .
crayons;
to coordinate research projects;
to promote personnel transfer between its members;
to support its member associations in obtaining public funds;
to advise on the establishment of new research associations in industry;
to represent the members' general interests; and
to act as a link between the members and the public administration.
AiF currently has 106 member associations that vary in size and structure.
The AiF distinguishes three categories of members: type A comprises associa-
tions with individual companies as members; type B unites industrial organiza-
tions; and type A/B combines individual companies and industrial organizations.
About 46 percent of member associations are type A; 41 percent are type B; and
the remaining 13 percent are type A/B.
The different industrial associations comprise a broad range of industries and
extend from textiles to mining and energy. One example of a member association
is presented in Table 3.22.
ORGANIZATION OF COOPERATIVE RESEARCH
About 90 percent of all member companies of the AiF are considered small
or medium sized; just 10 percent of the firms operate on a large scale (i.e., with
1,000 or more employees). With this structure, a special approach to technology
transfer is needed, as SMEs are considered to have certain deficits in their capac-
ity to finance research activities. An appropriate solution is cooperative research
activities (Gemeinschaftsforschung), which are collectively initiated by several
companies in an industrial research association, but conducted by separate re-
search institutes. In this report, the term "cooperative research" is used primarily
in the context of industrial research associations. It should not be confused with
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334 TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER SYSTEMS IN THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY
TABLE 3.22 Structure of the Food and Beverages Sector and its Member
Research Associations
Number of
Companies
Association (type) (SMEa/LEb) Research Institute(s)
Brewing (type A)
332/9
Breweries (type B) 994 / 6
Food-producing industry 3,836 / 313
(type A/B)
Yeast-producing industry
(type A)
Plant growing (type A)
Manufacturing of spirits
(type A)
Experimental and Academic School of
Brewing, at the Institute for Fermentation
Industry and Biotechnology, Berlin.
No special research institute; cooperation with
universities teaching brewing.
Six research institutes of its own; cooperation
with federal research institutes as well as
with institutes at universities and
polytechnical schools.
10 / 0 Research institute for baking yeast at the
Institute for Fermentation Industry and
60/0
461/0
Biotechnology, Berlin.
No special research institute.
Experimental and Academic School of the
Fabrication of Spirits, at the Institute for
Fermentation Industry and Biotechnology,
Berlin.
aSME = companies with fewer than 1,000 employees.
bLE = large-scale enterprises (1,000 or more employees).
SOURCE: Arbeitsgemeinschaft industrieller Forschungsvereinigungen (1991).
"collaborative research," in which different institutions collectively perform re-
search within the context of joint projects.
Obviously, several SMEs competing in the same market will not want to
work together on research applicable to their competitive position. Therefore,
cooperative research projects are "strictly precompetitive" (Schiele, 1993) and
the results that come out of such research leave room for individual companies to
adapt the findings to their special needs. Typical areas of cooperative research
are setting technical rules for safety purposes and standardization to reduce pro-
duction costs. A variety of projects concern environmental problems, such as the
elaboration of ecologically optimized products and processes. As all research
topics are initiated by the companies, the former often emerge from daily busi-
ness on the companies' shop floors; these are so-called bottom-up problems
(Schiele, 1993~. In this sense, industrial cooperative research is complementary
to the top-down approach of research institutions like the MPG and of many
programs of the BMBF.
Cooperative research is usually initiated by the SMEs themselves without
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TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER IN GERMANY
any outside influence (Schiele, 1993~. Next, the firms
335
: inform their research asso-
ciation of their particular research problem. The advisory board of the associa-
tion discusses whether the problem is interesting for other members of the corre-
sponding branch and whether it will be possible to define a suitable research
project. In this first step of evaluation, about 50 percent of proposed research
ideas are rejected. This first phase of project definition at the research association
level must be viewed as crucial, since it is a collective, interactive process for
determining common problems. The definition of appropriate problems is a ma-
jor prerequisite for the success of the related research projects. In this regard, the
projects of the industrial research associations are truly cooperative.
When a project is approved, an expert group plans its contents and its costs in
detail and chooses an appropriate institute to implement it. In 1990, about 53 per-
cent of the 1,102 projects were performed in one of the 68 institutes belonging to
the research associations themselves; 43 percent were carried out by university
institutes; and the remaining 6 percent were done by other public or private re-
search institutions. Since then, the percentage undertaken by other institutions,
primarily independent research institutes, has increased considerably, reaching
24 percent.
The individual research associations have to decide whether a project can be
carried out exclusively with internal funds, or whether it requires public support.
Getting public funding can be a rather difficult and time-consuming procedure.
Only if the research association decides to seek public support will the AiF be
involved. In this case, the member association submits an application to the AiF,
where the project is again evaluated by an expert group. There are currently 8
groups with 140 experts from science and industry involved in this evaluation
procedure. In this second evaluation, another 26 percent of the submitted appli-
cations are rejected. Next, the Authorizing Committee (Bewilligungsausschup)
of the AiF decides whether or not the accepted projects should be recommended
to the German Ministry of Economics for public support. The whole evaluation
procedure is illustrated in Figure 3.28.
If the project is recommended to the German Ministry of Economics, it gets
complete financing from the ministry. The public funds are allocated to the AiF,
which administers them. To receive public support, the particular research asso-
ciation must match the support it receives from the government by investing at
least the same amount of its own resources in other cooperative research projects.
During past years, funding by AiF member associations on average amounted to
about twice as much as the public support.
To sum up, cooperative research projects can be financed either by industry,
at the level of industrial research associations, or publicly, by the Federal Minis-
try of Economics. When a project is publicly funded, the AiF plays a decisive
role in the evaluation of project proposals and in project administration. In this
context, it has to be emphasized that the AiF is completely financed by its mem-
ber associations and not by public funds.
OCR for page 336
336 TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER SYSTEMS IN THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY
research
association
2
AiF
3
jobs
·: the research
\ association /
... ... ~.~.~. ~.~. ~.
S. S: SiS i~ IS ~ Si: ~ S: ?~S i?~S TESS. if: All.. SS::. S. ?. S
i S . ~ i S ~ S i ? ~ ~ ? ?
S: S ~ S: ~ SSS:S,
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ . ~ . ~ ~. ~ ~...~. Hi.. ... ~ . .. Ail. ~ ~
~ ~_ ~ _~ -it -- rat- ~ ~
~ ~ S: ~ S~ S: Ti~ iS: iS:
,S, S~ S~ S S iS ~ SS: ~
:::::: :::: ::: :::::::::: ::::::: :::::: ::: ::: :::: :::::: :::::: ::::::::::: ::::::::::: ::::: ::::::::::::
i S ~ ~ i S ~ i S S S::: i S ~ S: i S i:
i S i S:: i S ~ i S i S i S i S i S S: S i ~ S ~
S: ~ S: ~. S::: S: i S ~ i S:: S: S! ~ S S S
S ~S S -, S. ?: S: ~: S S.:: S i,::
SSSSi~ SiSi~S,2252 SS,,!S,~ ?
i S i S:: S S T ? ~? ~: S. ? S ~S ~ , S. S.: S
/= rejection quota
cat 26%
~I! expert groups
of the AiF J
authorizing ~
·< committee of the AiF J
rejection quota
cat 3%
4
research
association
~ imDIementation
·(:upervising committees)
-
break-off quota
cat 1%
5
Results
/
am/ single expert
\: of the AiF
/
FIGURE 3.28 Evaluation steps for publicly funded projects involving industrial coop-
erative research. SOURCE: Schiele (1993).
BUDGET AND ORIENTATION
The history of the AiF until 1961 was marked by the financial aid of the
European Recovery Program. From the time AiF was established, it was evident
that the financing of cooperative research should be shared by the government,
the participating companies, and the member associations. During the early years
of the AiF, public funding exceeded contributions by AiF members, but a con-
stant increase in membership brought in new financial resources. Public funding
today serves as an incentive and allows the development of "riskier" research
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TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER IN GERMANY
337
projects. In 1975, a remarkable decision enabled member associations to apply
on behalf of single companies, even small firms without the required capital, in
order to obtain research funds. This decision has resulted in the promotion of
many small companies that otherwise have almost no chance of receiving public
funds. The financial strength of their association not only serves as a guarantee
but also contributes to the monetary support.
Figure 3.29 shows the development of public and private industrial funds for
cooperative research. The sinking increase of public support in 1991 and 1992
was due to a special effort made for SMEs in the former East Germany. At the
same time, industrial funds increased as well, so that in 1993, they were again
about twice as plentiful as public funds, just as was true in the 1980s. In 1991,
public and private expenditures for cooperative research amounted to DM 470
million, or about 1 percent of total R&D spending in industry. This share seems
to be quite modest. However, one should bear in mind that about 60 percent of
industrial R&D is performed by very large companies with more than 10,000
employees. Only about 17 percent is earned out by SMEs, and SMEs are the
target group of cooperative research (see SV-Wissenschaftsstatistik, 1994, 1996~.
About 6 percent of research conducted in SMEs is cooperative research within
research associations.
The situation in different industrial sectors vanes considerably. In the textile
sector, the share of cooperative research represents about 42 percent of the total
R&D expenditure of industry, whereas in electrical engineering it is only 0.1 per-
cent (Table 3.23~. Cooperative research is in general more important for indus
250
200
150
o
~ 100
o
3
50
.
-Pubic support
Industrial funds
O
86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93
year
FIGURE 3.29 Public and industrial funds for cooperative research, 1986-1993, in con-
stant 1980 DM. SOURCE: AiF-Verwaltung (1995~.
OCR for page 338
338 TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER SYSTEMS IN THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY
TABLE 3.23 Importance of Cooperative Research in Different Industry
Sectors in Germany, 1989
Sector's Percent
Share of R&D
Sector's Total Expenditures Percent Turnover
R&D Expenditure on Industrial Represented by
as Percent Cooperative Sector's 10 Largest
Sector of Turnover Research Companies
Aeronautics, aerospace 30.9 0.0 95
Electrical engineering 9.3 0.1 30
Chemical industry 6.3 0.1 30
Vehicle industry 4.1 0.0 74
Mechanical industry 3.6 1.4 12
Materials for construction 2.0 5.0 52
Wood, paper, printing 1.2 8.3 33
Textiles 1.0 42.2 12
Nutrition 0.7 7.0 11
Con manufacturing 0.6 22.0 75
SOURCE: Schiele (1993).
trial sectors with a low R&D intensity. Sectors with a low level of concentration
(indicated in Figure 3.30 by the share of turnover, or sales, of the 10 biggest
companies) and thus a high share of SMEs also often rely to a great extent on
cooperative research. However, in the highly concentrated sector of iron manu-
facturing, the impact of cooperative research is significant. All in all, cooperative
research is focused primarily on traditional sectors, whereas in research-intensive
areas like chemistry, electrical engineering, and aeronautics, its role is negligible.
The distribution of public and private funds in different industrial sectors is shown
in Figure 3.30.
As to the focal areas of this study, production and manufacturing are broadly
represented in the activities of different research associations. For these kinds of
industries, cooperative research seems to be a quite appropriate means of technol-
ogy transfer. Biotechnology is not only an area of cooperative research unto
itself but plays an increasing role in projects of the food industry. Cooperative
research among microelectronics and software firms is rare, as the electrotechnical
sector has traditionally not established relevant research associations. Coopera-
tive projects in the two fields do occur, however, in the context of process and
production automation.
An examination of research reports resulting from cooperative projects (e.g.,
ArbeitsgemeinschaftindustriellerForschungsvereinigungen, 1992, 1994),reveals
that most such projects are highly application oriented. The project "Shortening
of the Ripening Period for Hard Cheese" is a typical example. Conducted at a
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TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER IN GERMANY
Energy
Mining
Stones, earth
Chemistry, oil
Plastics
Ferrous, nonferrous metals
Civil engineering
Steel, mechanical engineering
Wood, paper, printing
Electrical engineering, optics
Food
Textiles, clothing
Other
339
.
'
~ :
_ ,,,,,,,.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:::::::::::: 1
....... :
| E] Public funds (in 1990)
em_
_
_ ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, :.:.:.:.:.:.:.::::::: :4
::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::!
0 5 10 15 20
million DM
25 30 35
FIGURE 3.30 Volume of public funds and industrial funds spent on cooperative re-
search. SOURCE: Bottger (1993~.
research laboratory in the former East Germany, financed by the Ministry of Eco-
nomics, and initiated by the Research Circle of the Food Industry (Forschungs-
kreis der Ernahrungsindustrie e.V., Bonn), the project yielded the finding that
adding cell-free extracts of lactobacillus to milk accelerates substantially pro-
teolysis and therefore reduces the period needed to ripen cheese. This reduces the
requirements for energy and space, and since adding the extracts actually im-
proves the flavor of the cheese, it increases the quality of cheese.
Another example from the food and beverage industry is a project initiated
by the Science Promotion of the German Breweries (Wissenschaftsforderung der
deutschen Brauwirtschaft e. V., Bonn) and carried out at the Institute for Brewery
Technology at the Technical University of Munich. Funded by public sources,
"Research on the Production of Volatile Aroma Essences for the Aging of Bottled
Beer and the Possibilities of Technological Influence" resulted in techniques for
the optimization of the brewing process. The development of an objective sen-
sory evaluation technique made it possible to establish criteria for the stability of
flavorings.
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER
In the framework of industrial cooperative research, we have to distinguish
between two different target groups for technology transfer. The first group con-
sists of the enterprises that initiate projects and are directly involved in their defi-
nition and application. These firms are also closely involved in supervising the
project's implementation, so that an intensive process of technology transfer takes
place. The phase of project definition, especially, implies detailed consideration
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340 TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER SYSTEMS IN THE UNITED STATES AND GERMANY
of the research problem, interaction with other companies, and discussions with
research institutions; the submission of a qualified proposal usually requires an
effort of several months (Arbeitsgemeinschaft industrieller Forschungsvereini-
gungen, 1992~. Since the involved SMEs define the projects according to their
special needs, they are interested in applying the research results. With regard to
this target group, cooperative research is demand driven, a situation that is favor-
able for successful technology transfer.
The second target group is composed of other member companies of a re-
search association that are not directly involved in the application and execution
of a research project. According to the general rules of cooperative research, the
research association has to make the results of its projects available to all of its
members. The major means of disseminating information is the documentation
of research results in regular journals of the association and research reports. In
addition, meetings, seminars, demonstrations in companies, exhibitions, and simi-
lar transfer activities are organized. In many cases, the research results lead to the
introduction or change of norms and standards (Arbeitsgemeinschaft industrieller
Forschungsvereinigungen, 1992~. The technology transfer to this second group
is, of course, less efficient than it is to the first group. Companies have to become
aware of the existence of the research results and must determine whether or not
these results may be useful for their purposes. In the case of large associations,
the activities of the member companies often vary considerably, so that the re-
sults of a research project are useful for only a limited group of members.
According to a recent study by Lageman et al. (1995), about 20 percent of
member companies actively use the results of cooperative research. Of the com-
panies that are involved in committees of their research association, almost 90 per-
cent use the results of cooperative research. This latter subset of companies is
largely equivalent to the first target group described above. Furthermore, the
type of membership in the research association is important for the efficiency of
technology transfer. If the companies are direct members, they frequently use the
research results. If they have only indirect membership through an industrial
organization (research association type B. see description above), about 75 per-
cent never use research results and one-third do not even know that the possibility
of cooperative research exists.
To sum up, technology transfer is very efficient for the group of companies
that are directly involved in the definition and execution of projects. As to the
rest, the research associations and the AiF undertake various activities to support
technology transfer, but the effect is limited. Lageman et al. (1995) suggested a
variety of measures for improving technology transfer to this second target group,
such as establishing on-line databases and preparing more user-friendly docu-
mentation of research results. Probably the most important step for facilitating
effective technology transfer is for associations to identify contact persons within
their member companies to establish regular and stable communication struc-
tures. Despite all these improvements, the effect on the second target group will
Representative terms from entire chapter:
research association