Innovation Policies of Brazil

September, 2013
IDA document: P-5039
FFRDC: Science and Technology Policy Institute
Type: Documents , Space
Authors:
Authors
Nayanee Gupta, Christopher Weber, Vanessa Peña, Stephanie S. Shipp, David Healey See more authors
This report examines the political, economic, demographic, and other factors that are brought to bear on Brazil’s industrial and innovation policies. The analysis explores Brazil’s strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, and threats to show that both governance and socio-economic factors play an important role in determining how well a country is able to use its endowments to create a strong national innovation system. Recent policies suggest the government and private sector leaders in Brazil are transitioning from technology and commercialization-driven research and development (R&D) toward more ambitious, long-term, and transformational science, with emphasis in energy efficiency, space and defense technologies, and high-energy physics. Increasing the government’s long-term (technology agnostic) investments in basic science R&D, raising the standards of universities, and emphasizing global collaborations will go a long way toward realizing Brazil’s vision for a knowledge-based economy, but only if paired with an increased tolerance for risk taking.