Knowledge Spillovers

Definition

The unintended transfer of knowledge from one firm or sector to others, creating wider economic benefits that the original investor cannot fully capture. Knowledge spillovers are a defining characteristic of intangible investment and a key justification for public policy support of R&D, education, and innovation.

Complementary Terms

Concepts that frequently appear alongside Knowledge Spillovers in practice.

Knowledge Capital

The accumulated stock of codified and tacit knowledge within an organisation, encompassing technical expertise, process documentation, proprietary methods, and institutional memory. Knowledge capital is a core intangible asset that directly influences innovation capacity, operational efficiency, and competitive advantage.

Knowledge Economy

An economic system in which growth and value creation are driven primarily by the production, distribution, and application of knowledge and information rather than physical goods. In the knowledge economy, intangible assets — including human capital, software, data, and intellectual property — constitute the majority of enterprise and national wealth.

Solow Residual

The portion of economic output growth that cannot be explained by measurable increases in labour and capital inputs, named after economist Robert Solow. The Solow residual is often interpreted as a measure of technological progress and is closely related to total factor productivity, capturing the output gains attributable to intangible factors such as innovation, education, and institutional quality.

Research & Development (R&D)

Systematic investigation and experimentation aimed at creating new products, services, or processes, or significantly improving existing ones. R&D expenditure is one of the largest categories of intangible asset investment and is a key driver of innovation capital and future competitiveness.

Technology Transfer

The process of transferring technological knowledge, intellectual property, or capabilities from one organisation or context to another. Technology transfer is central to the commercialisation of university research, licensing agreements, and cross-border investment, and its effectiveness depends on the quality of codified knowledge and absorptive capacity of the recipient.

Social Capital

The value created through social relationships, networks, and trust within and between organisations. Social capital facilitates knowledge transfer, collaboration, and collective action, and is increasingly recognised as a measurable intangible asset that influences innovation, productivity, and organisational resilience.

IAS 38 (Intangible Assets)

The International Accounting Standard governing the recognition, measurement, and disclosure of intangible assets. IAS 38 requires that an intangible asset be identifiable, controlled by the entity, and expected to generate future economic benefits.

Entrepreneurial Profit

The return that an investor or developer would require as compensation for the risk and effort of creating an intangible asset, above and beyond the direct costs of development. In the cost approach to valuation, entrepreneurial profit is added to the reproduction or replacement cost to reflect the economic reality that a willing buyer would not pay less than the cost to create plus a reasonable return on the development investment.

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