This information, which comes from the fourth Community Innovation Survey, covering the EU27 Member States, Norway and Iceland, is released by Eurostat, the Statistical Office of the European Communities on the occasion of the launch by the European Commission of the European Innovation Scoreboard 2006 (EIS). The EIS evaluates and compares the innovation performance of the EU Member States. It was first devised in the year 2000, as a result of the adoption of the Lisbon strategy. The EIS 2006 is mainly based on data from Eurostat, including those coming from the fourth Community Innovation Survey.
Innovation co-operation highest in Lithuania, Slovenia and Finland
Innovation co-operation stood at 26% of all innovative enterprises in the EU27 in 2002-2004. The highest levels of innovation co-operation were found in Lithuania (56% of all innovative enterprises), Slovenia (47%) and Finland (44%), and the lowest levels in Italy (13%) and Germany (16%).
In the EU27, the most common co-operation partners were suppliers (17% of all innovative enterprises worked with them) and customers (14%). Suppliers were the most frequent partners in nearly all Member States, with the highest levels found in Lithuania (45%) and the lowest in Germany, Italy and Austria (7% each). Co-operation with customers in innovation activities ranged from 4% in Spain and Cyprus to 41% in Finland. Innovative enterprises in the EU27 worked together much less often with universities and other higher education institutes (9%) or government and public research institutes (6%). Private-public co-operation on innovation was most frequent in Finland, Slovenia, Slovakia, Latvia and Lithuania, while it was least common in Italy, Malta, Romania and Cyprus.