Raymond M. Wolfe [1]
Businesses spent $400 billion on research and development performance in the United States in 2017, a 6.8% increase from 2016 (table 1). Funding from the companies' own sources was $339 billion in 2017, a 6.7% increase from 2016. Funding from other sources was $61 billion in 2017 and $57 billion in 2016. Data for this InfoBrief are from the 2016 Business R&D and Innovation Survey (BRDIS) and the 2017 Business Research and Development Survey (BRDS), both developed and cosponsored by the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics (NCSES) within the National Science Foundation and by the U.S. Census Bureau.[2]
Selected characteristic and company size | 2016 | 2017 | ||
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i = more than 50% of the estimate is a combination of imputation and reweighting to account for nonresponse. NA = not available. a Domestic R&D performance is the cost of R&D paid for by the respondent company and others outside of the company and performed by the company. NOTES: Detail may not add to total because of rounding. Statistics are representative of companies located in the United States that performed or funded R&D. Excludes data for federally funded research and development centers. SOURCE: National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation, and U.S. Census Bureau, Business R&D and Innovation Survey and Business Research and Development Survey. |
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Domestic R&D performancea | 374,685 | 400,100 | ||
Type of R&Db | ||||
Basic research | 24,644 | 24,829 | ||
Applied research | 61,020 | 62,132 | ||
Development | 289,021 | 313,139 | ||
Paid for by the companyc | 317,731 | 339,036 | ||
Basic research | 19,143 | 18,732 | ||
Applied research | 48,806 | 49,149 | ||
Development | 249,782 | 271,155 | ||
Paid for by others | 56,954 | 61,065 | ||
Basic research | 5,501 | 6,097 | ||
Applied research | 12,213 | 12,984 | ||
Development | 39,239 | 41,984 | ||
Source of funds | ||||
Federal | 23,772 | 24,277 | i | |
Otherd | 33,182 | 36,788 | ||
Size of company (number of domestic employees) | ||||
Micro companiese | ||||
5–9 | 1,581 | i | NA | |
Small companiesf | ||||
10–19 | 4,958 | i | 3,311 | |
20–49 | 9,662 | i | 9,435 | |
Medium companies | ||||
50–99 | 9,298 | 10,141 | ||
100–249 | 14,875 | 17,216 | ||
Large companies | ||||
250–499 | 13,092 | 14,103 | ||
500–999 | 14,450 | 17,871 | ||
1,000–4,999 | 63,971 | 65,112 | ||
5,000–9,999 | 40,633 | 40,198 | ||
10,000–24,999 | 65,594 | 73,485 | ||
25,000 or more | 136,571 | 149,227 |
In 2017, of the $400 billion companies spent on R&D, $25 billion (6%) was spent on basic research, $62 billion (16%) on applied research, and $313 billion (78%) on development. The distribution was similar to the 2016 distribution (7%, 16%, and 77%, respectively) (table 1). In 2017, companies in manufacturing industries performed $257 billion (64%) of domestic R&D, defined as R&D performed in the 50 states and Washington, DC (table 2).
Industry, NAICS code, and company size | All R&Da | Paid for by the companyb |
Paid for by others | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Total | Federal | Companies | All other organizationsd |
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Domestic | Foreignc | |||||||||||
* = amount is less than $500,000; D = suppressed to avoid disclosure of confidential information; i = more than 50% of the estimate is a combination of imputation and reweighting to account for nonresponse. NAICS = North American Industry Classification System; nec = not elsewhere classified. a All R&D is the cost of domestic R&D paid for by the respondent company and others outside of the company and performed by the company. NOTES: Detail may not add to total because of rounding. Statistics are representative of companies located in the United States that performed or funded R&D. Industry classification was based on dominant business code for domestic R&D performance, where available. For companies that did not report business codes, the classification used for sampling was assigned. Excludes data for federally funded research and development centers. SOURCE: National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation, and U.S. Census Bureau, Business Research and Development Survey, 2017. |
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All industries, 21–33, 42–81 | 400,100 | 339,036 | 61,065 | 24,277 | i | 17,494 | 18,404 | 890 | i | |||
Manufacturing industries, 31–33 | 257,227 | 216,155 | 41,072 | 18,889 | i | 6,229 | 15,434 | 520 | i | |||
Chemicals, 325 | 74,977 | 63,285 | 11,692 | 205 | 2,696 | 8,707 | 84 | |||||
Pharmaceuticals and medicines, 3254 | 66,202 | 55,229 | 10,973 | 186 | 2,685 | 8,019 | 83 | |||||
Other 325 | 8,775 | 8,056 | 719 | 19 | 11 | 688 | 1 | |||||
Machinery, 333 | 13,197 | 12,257 | 940 | 170 | 130 | i | 640 | 0 | ||||
Computer and electronic products, 334 | 78,575 | 69,942 | 8,633 | 3,937 | D | D | D | |||||
Electrical equipment, appliance, and components, 335 | 4,291 | 4,110 | 181 | 38 | 65 | 77 | i | 1 | i | |||
Transportation equipment, 336 | 53,292 | 34,629 | 18,663 | i | 14,433 | i | D | 2,219 | D | |||
Automobiles, bodies, trailers, and parts, 3361–63 | 23,881 | 21,137 | 2,745 | D | D | D | D | |||||
Aerospace products and parts, 3364 | 26,383 | 11,903 | 14,480 | i | D | 1,209 | i | D | D | |||
Other 336 | 3,028 | 1,589 | 1,438 | D | D | D | D | |||||
Manufacturing nec, other 31–33 | 32,895 | 31,932 | 963 | i | 106 | i | D | D | D | |||
Nonmanufacturing industries, 21–23, 42–81 | 142,874 | 122,881 | 19,993 | 5,388 | 11,265 | i | 2,970 | 370 | i | |||
Information, 51 | 80,252 | 78,898 | 1,354 | 98 | 117 | 1,138 | 1 | |||||
Software publishers, 5112 | 34,264 | 33,201 | 1,062 | 62 | 66 | 933 | 1 | |||||
Other 51 | 45,988 | 45,697 | 292 | 36 | 51 | 205 | 0 | |||||
Finance and insurance, 52 | 7,616 | 7,565 | 51 | 0 | * | i | 0 | 51 | ||||
Professional, scientific, and technical services, 54 | 36,922 | 18,972 | 17,951 | 5,256 | 10,874 | i | 1,530 | 291 | i | |||
Computer systems design and related services, 5415 | 13,327 | 11,669 | 1,658 | 995 | 339 | 201 | 123 | |||||
Scientific R&D services, 5417 | 17,321 | 2,817 | 14,504 | 3,200 | 10,024 | i | 1,160 | 120 | i | |||
Other 54 | 6,274 | 4,486 | 1,789 | 1,061 | 511 | i | 169 | 48 | i | |||
Nonmanufacturing nec, other 21–23, 42–81 | 18,084 | 17,446 | 637 | 34 | 274 | 302 | 27 | |||||
Size of company (number of domestic employees) | ||||||||||||
Small companies | ||||||||||||
10–19e | 3,311 | 2,402 | 909 | 485 | D | D | D | |||||
20–49 | 9,435 | 7,593 | 1,842 | 605 | 632 | 531 | 74 | i | ||||
Medium companies | ||||||||||||
50–99 | 10,141 | 8,070 | 2,071 | 659 | 668 | 599 | 145 | |||||
100–249 | 17,216 | 13,514 | 3,703 | 1,241 | 866 | 1,524 | 72 | |||||
Large companies | ||||||||||||
250–499 | 14,103 | 11,773 | 2,331 | 592 | 834 | 863 | 42 | |||||
500–999 | 17,871 | 16,295 | 1,576 | 221 | 311 | 1,038 | 6 | |||||
1,000–4,999 | 65,112 | 52,341 | 12,771 | 1,461 | 2,724 | 8,531 | 55 | |||||
5,000–9,999 | 40,198 | 32,701 | 7,497 | 1,525 | 4,938 | i | 1,011 | 23 | ||||
10,000–24,999 | 73,485 | 63,415 | 10,070 | 3,514 | 2,627 | i | 3,917 | 12 | i | |||
25,000 or more | 149,227 | 130,931 | 18,295 | i | 13,976 | i | D | D | D |
Most of the funding was from these companies' own funds (84%). Companies in nonmanufacturing industries performed $143 billion of domestic R&D (36% of total domestic R&D performance), 86% of which was paid for from companies' own funds.
The U.S. federal government was the chief source of external funding for R&D (also referred to as R&D paid for by others) across all industries. Of the $61 billion paid for by others, the federal government accounted for $24 billion, most of which came from the Department of Defense ($17 billion) (data available in the full set of data tables). Ninety-seven percent of federal government funding went toward transportation equipment (North American Industry Classification System [NAICS] code 336) ($14 billion), professional, scientific, and technical services (NAICS 54) ($5 billion), and computer and electronic products (NAICS 334) ($4 billion). Next among external funders were foreign companies ($18 billion)—including foreign parent companies of U.S. subsidiaries—and other U.S. companies ($17 billion) (table 2). (See "Survey Information and Data Availability" for information on the availability of data tables with full industry detail.)
Small- and medium-sized companies (10 to 249 domestic employees) performed 10% of the nation's total business R&D in 2017 (table 1).[3] In these companies, the R&D-to-sales ratio (or R&D intensity) was 8.3% (table 1 and table 3). These companies accounted for 5% of sales and employed 7% of the 19.9 million employees who worked for R&D-performing or R&D-funding companies. They employed 18% of the 1.6 million employees engaged in business R&D in the United States.
Industry, NAICS code, and company size | Domestic net sales (US$millions)a |
R&D intensity (%)b |
Domestic employment (thousands)c |
|
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Total | R&Dd | |||
NAICS = North American Industry Classification System; nec = not elsewhere classified. a Dollar values for goods sold or services rendered by R&D-performing or R&D-funding companies located in the United States to customers outside of the company, including the U.S. federal government, foreign customers, and the company's foreign subsidiaries. Included are revenues from a company's foreign operations and subsidiaries and from discontinued operations. If a respondent company is owned by a foreign parent company, sales to the parent company and to affiliates not owned by the respondent company are included. Excluded are intracompany transfers, returns, allowances, freight charges, and excise, sales, and other revenue-based taxes. NOTES: Detail may not add to total because of rounding. Sales, R&D intensity, and total domestic employment statistics are representative of companies located in the United States that performed or funded R&D; R&D employment statistics are representative of companies located in the United States that performed R&D. Industry classification was based on dominant business code for domestic R&D performance, where available. For companies that did not report business codes, the classification used for sampling was assigned. Excludes data for federally funded research and development centers. SOURCE: National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation, and U.S. Census Bureau, Business Research and Development Survey, 2017. |
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All industries, 21–33, 42–81 | 9,682,692 | 4.1 | 19,893 | 1,609 |
Manufacturing industries, 31–33 | 5,423,997 | 4.7 | 9,919 | 916 |
Chemicals, 325 | 901,859 | 8.3 | 1,234 | 174 |
Pharmaceuticals and medicines, 3254 | 466,391 | 14.2 | 518 | 127 |
Other 325 | 435,468 | 2.0 | 716 | 47 |
Machinery, 333 | 323,082 | 4.1 | 839 | 85 |
Computer and electronic products, 334 | 697,118 | 11.3 | 1,200 | 258 |
Electrical equipment, appliance, and components, 335 | 113,434 | 3.8 | 291 | 29 |
Transportation equipment, 336 | 1,173,095 | 4.5 | 1,771 | 172 |
Automobiles, bodies, trailers, and parts, 3361–63 | 756,472 | 3.2 | 852 | 92 |
Aerospace products and parts, 3364 | 350,201 | 7.5 | 710 | 67 |
Other 336 | 66,422 | 4.6 | 209 | 13 |
Manufacturing nec, other 31–33 | 2,215,409 | 1.5 | 4,584 | 198 |
Nonmanufacturing industries, 21–23, 42–81 | 4,258,695 | 3.4 | 9,974 | 693 |
Information, 51 | 1,192,143 | 6.7 | 1,945 | 305 |
Software publishers, 5112 | 230,197 | 14.9 | 572 | 134 |
Other 51 | 961,946 | 4.8 | 1,373 | 171 |
Finance and insurance, 52 | 736,468 | 1.0 | 1,211 | 36 |
Professional, scientific, and technical services, 54 | 400,375 | 9.2 | 1,330 | 235 |
Computer systems design and related services, 5415 | 152,271 | 8.8 | 456 | 78 |
Scientific R&D services, 5417 | 69,134 | 25.1 | 283 | 86 |
Other 54 | 178,970 | 3.5 | 591 | 71 |
Nonmanufacturing nec, other 21–23, 42–81 | 1,929,709 | 0.9 | 5,488 | 117 |
Size of company (number of domestic employees) | ||||
Small companiese | ||||
10–19 | 24,126 | 13.7 | 73 | 26 |
20–49 | 86,131 | 11.0 | 285 | 78 |
Medium companies | ||||
50–99 | 116,967 | 8.7 | 366 | 74 |
100–249 | 258,031 | 6.7 | 669 | 111 |
Large companies | ||||
250–499 | 280,138 | 5.0 | 686 | 87 |
500–999 | 368,694 | 4.8 | 849 | 90 |
1,000–4,999 | 1,249,905 | 5.2 | 2,668 | 275 |
5,000–9,999 | 939,230 | 4.3 | 1,710 | 185 |
10,000–24,999 | 1,851,278 | 4.0 | 3,007 | 248 |
25,000 or more | 4,508,191 | 3.3 | 9,581 | 437 |
Large companies with 250 to 24,999 domestic employees performed 53% of the nation's total business R&D in 2017, and their R&D intensity was 4.5%. They accounted for 48% of sales, employed 45% of those who worked for R&D-performing or R&D-funding companies, and employed 55% of R&D employees in the United States.
The largest companies (25,000 or more domestic employees) performed 37% of the nation's total business R&D in 2017, and their R&D intensity was 3.3%. They accounted for 47% of sales, employed 48% of those who worked for R&D-performing or R&D-funding companies, and employed 27% of R&D employees in the United States.
Business R&D is concentrated in a relatively small number of states. In 2017, companies reported $339 billion of domestic R&D paid for by the company. Businesses in California alone accounted for 35% of this amount (table 4). Other states with large amounts of business R&D paid for by companies' own funds in 2017 were Washington (6% of the national total), Massachusetts (6%), Michigan (6%), Texas (5%), New York (4%), New Jersey (4%), Illinois (4%), and Pennsylvania (3%).[4]
State | All R&Da | Paid for by the company |
Paid for by others |
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i = more than 50% of the estimate is a combination of imputation and reweighting to account for nonresponse. a All R&D is the cost of domestic R&D paid for by the respondent company and others outside of the company and performed by the company. NOTES: Detail may not add to totals because of rounding. Statistics are representative of companies located in the United States that performed or funded R&D. Excludes data for federally funded research and development centers. SOURCE: National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation, and U.S. Census Bureau, Business Research and Development Survey, 2017. |
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United States | 400,100 | 339,036 | 61,065 | ||||||||||
Alabama | 1,896 | 968 | 928 | ||||||||||
Alaska | 912 | 905 | 7 | ||||||||||
Arizona | 6,338 | 4,476 | 1,862 | ||||||||||
Arkansas | 466 | 442 | 24 | ||||||||||
California | 132,473 | 120,111 | 12,362 | ||||||||||
Colorado | 4,703 | 3,828 | 875 | ||||||||||
Connecticut | 8,694 | 6,423 | 2,272 | ||||||||||
Delaware | 2,048 | 1,445 | i | 603 | |||||||||
District of Columbia | 406 | 279 | 127 | ||||||||||
Florida | 6,463 | 4,496 | 1,966 | i | |||||||||
Georgia | 6,450 | 5,085 | 1,365 | i | |||||||||
Hawaii | 169 | 105 | 64 | ||||||||||
Idaho | 1,747 | 1,527 | 220 | ||||||||||
Illinois | 14,399 | 12,743 | 1,655 | i | |||||||||
Indiana | 6,283 | 5,394 | 889 | ||||||||||
Iowa | 2,938 | 2,195 | 743 | ||||||||||
Kansas | 2,212 | 1,486 | 726 | i | |||||||||
Kentucky | 983 | 758 | 225 | ||||||||||
Louisiana | 297 | 243 | 53 | ||||||||||
Maine | 292 | 257 | 35 | ||||||||||
Maryland | 5,595 | 3,106 | 2,488 | i | |||||||||
Massachusetts | 23,655 | 18,912 | 4,743 | ||||||||||
Michigan | 21,042 | 19,101 | 1,941 | ||||||||||
Minnesota | 7,146 | 6,633 | 513 | ||||||||||
Mississippi | 266 | 221 | 45 | ||||||||||
Missouri | 5,299 | i | 3,433 | 1,866 | i | ||||||||
Montana | 133 | 114 | 18 | ||||||||||
Nebraska | 592 | 470 | 122 | i | |||||||||
Nevada | 624 | 439 | 186 | ||||||||||
New Hampshire | 1,361 | 754 | 607 | i | |||||||||
New Jersey | 16,405 | 13,228 | 3,177 | ||||||||||
New Mexico | 802 | 298 | 503 | i | |||||||||
New York | 15,671 | 13,430 | 2,241 | ||||||||||
North Carolina | 10,246 | 7,502 | 2,744 | i | |||||||||
North Dakota | 304 | 276 | 28 | ||||||||||
Ohio | 9,769 | 6,697 | 3,071 | ||||||||||
Oklahoma | 833 | 775 | 58 | ||||||||||
Oregon | 7,691 | 7,426 | 265 | ||||||||||
Pennsylvania | 10,986 | 9,576 | 1,410 | ||||||||||
Rhode Island | 730 | 657 | 73 | ||||||||||
South Carolina | 1,370 | 1,212 | 158 | ||||||||||
South Dakota | 199 | 189 | 10 | ||||||||||
Tennessee | 1,407 | 1,172 | 235 | ||||||||||
Texas | 21,002 | 17,752 | 3,250 | ||||||||||
Utah | 2,846 | 2,171 | 675 | ||||||||||
Vermont | 253 | 241 | 11 | ||||||||||
Virginia | 4,332 | 2,659 | 1,674 | i | |||||||||
Washington | 21,462 | 20,820 | 642 | ||||||||||
West Virginia | 212 | 182 | 30 | ||||||||||
Wisconsin | 5,436 | 4,777 | 659 | ||||||||||
Wyoming | 87 | i | 82 | i | 5 | ||||||||
Undistributed fundsb | 2,181 | 1,561 | 620 |
U.S. companies that performed or funded R&D reported domestic net sales of $10 trillion in 2017 (table 3).[5] For all industries, the R&D intensity was 4.1%; for manufacturers, 4.7%; and for nonmanufacturers, 3.4%. Manufacturing industries with high levels of R&D intensity in 2017 were pharmaceuticals and medicines (NAICS 3254) (14.2%), computer and electronic products (NAICS 334) (11.3%), and aerospace products and parts (NAICS 3364) (7.5%). Among the nonmanufacturing industries, industries with high levels of R&D intensity were scientific R&D services (NAICS 5417) (25.1%), software publishers (NAICS 5112) (14.9%), and computer systems design and related services (NAICS 5415) (8.8%).
Businesses that performed or funded R&D employed 19.9 million people in the United States in 2017. Approximately 1.6 million (8%) were R&D employees.[6] Not surprisingly, industries with high levels of R&D intensity also had high numbers of R&D employees: computer and electronic products (NAICS 334) (258,000 R&D employees), pharmaceuticals and medicines (NAICS 3254) (127,000), and aerospace products and parts (NAICS 3364) (67,000). Nonmanufacturing industry groups with high numbers of R&D employees were software publishers (NAICS 5112) (134,000 R&D employees), scientific R&D services (NAICS 5417) (86,000), and computer systems design and related services (NAICS 5415) (78,000) (table 3).
Companies that performed or funded R&D in the United States in 2017 spent $587 billion on assets with expected useful lives of more than 1 year (table 5). Of this amount, $32 billion (5%) was spent on structures, equipment, software, and other assets used for R&D: $16 billion by manufacturing industries and $16 billion by nonmanufacturing industries. Manufacturing industries with high levels of capital expenditures on assets used for R&D in 2017 were pharmaceuticals and medicines (NAICS 3254) ($4.4 billion, 14% of capital expenditures on assets used for R&D), semiconductor and other electronic products (NAICS 3344) ($2.2 billion, 7%), and automobiles, bodies, trailers, and parts (NAICS 3361–63) ($1.2 billion, 4%). Among the nonmanufacturing industries with high levels of capital assets used for R&D were telecommunications services (NAICS 517) ($3.2 billion, 10%), computer systems design and related services (NAICS 5415) ($2.0 billion, 6%), and software publishers (NAICS 5112) ($1.1 billion, 4%).
Selected industry, NAICS code, and company size | Totalb | Used for domestic R&Da | ||||||||||
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Totalb,c | Structuresd | Equipment | Capitalized software |
All other and undistributede |
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D = data withheld to avoid disclosing operations of individual companies; i = more than 50% of the estimate is a combination of imputation and reweighting to account for nonresponse. NAICS = North American Industry Classification System; nec = not elsewhere classified. a Domestic R&D is the R&D paid for by the respondent company and others outside of the company and performed by the company. NOTES: Detail may not add to total because of rounding. Statistics are representative of companies located in the United States that performed or funded R&D. Industry classification was based on dominant business code for domestic R&D performance, where available. For companies that did not report business codes, the classification used for sampling was assigned. Excludes data for federally funded research and development centers. SOURCE: National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation, and U.S. Census Bureau, Business Research and Development Survey, 2017. |
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All industries, 21–33, 42–81 | 587,332 | 31,885 | 3,541 | 14,898 | 8,539 | 4,907 | ||||||
Manufacturing industries, 31–33 | 237,691 | 15,659 | 2,662 | 9,265 | 1,611 | 2,122 | ||||||
Chemicals, 325 | 41,932 | 5,394 | 1,788 | 2,250 | 469 | 887 | ||||||
Pharmaceuticals and medicines, 3254 | 16,211 | 4,394 | 1,565 | 1,641 | 399 | 789 | ||||||
Other 325 | 25,721 | 1,000 | 223 | 609 | 70 | 98 | ||||||
Machinery, 333 | 11,707 | 866 | 90 | 548 | 101 | 127 | ||||||
Computer and electronic products, 334 | 30,411 | 4,590 | 224 | 3,529 | 527 | 310 | ||||||
Communication equipment, 3342 | 2,920 | 843 | 32 | 653 | 59 | 99 | ||||||
Semiconductor and other electronic products, 3344 | 13,312 | i | 2,173 | i | 126 | i | 1,763 | i | 212 | i | 73 | i |
Other 334 | 14,179 | 1,574 | 66 | 1,113 | 256 | 138 | ||||||
Electrical equipment, appliance, and components, 335 | 3,067 | i | 227 | 7 | i | 130 | i | 15 | i | 76 | i | |
Transportation equipment, 336 | 60,636 | 1,791 | 158 | 1,141 | 222 | 271 | ||||||
Automobiles, bodies, trailers, and parts, 3361–63 | 46,164 | 1,177 | 103 | 759 | 143 | 173 | ||||||
Aerospace products and parts, 3364 | 11,396 | 522 | 39 | 340 | 77 | 67 | ||||||
Other 336 | 3,076 | 92 | 16 | 42 | 2 | 31 | ||||||
Manufacturing nec, other 31–33 | 89,938 | 2,791 | 395 | 1,667 | 277 | 451 | ||||||
Nonmanufacturing industries, 21–23, 42–81 | 349,640 | 16,226 | 879 | 5,633 | 6,928 | 2,785 | ||||||
Information, 51 | 117,469 | 7,730 | 555 | 3,637 | 2,739 | 800 | ||||||
Software publishers, 5112 | 18,215 | 1,128 | 113 | 714 | 209 | 92 | ||||||
Telecommunications services, 517 | 71,766 | 3,189 | D | 850 | 1,443 | D | ||||||
Other 51 | 27,488 | 3,413 | D | 2,073 | 1,087 | D | ||||||
Finance and insurance, 52 | 20,670 | 2,753 | 25 | i | 426 | 1,758 | 544 | |||||
Professional, scientific, and technical services, 54 | 13,853 | 3,072 | 187 | 881 | 1,402 | 602 | ||||||
Computer systems design and related services, 5415 | 6,156 | 2,020 | 97 | 552 | 1,128 | 243 | ||||||
Scientific R&D services, 5417 | 2,593 | 717 | 79 | 260 | 60 | 318 | ||||||
Other 54 | 5,104 | 335 | 11 | 69 | 214 | 41 | ||||||
Nonmanufacturing nec, other 21–23, 42–81 | 197,648 | 2,671 | 112 | 689 | 1,029 | 839 | ||||||
Size of company (number of domestic employees) | ||||||||||||
Small companiesf | ||||||||||||
10–19 | 1,642 | 319 | 13 | 133 | 64 | 109 | ||||||
20–49 | 6,837 | 924 | 43 | 413 | 104 | 364 | ||||||
Medium companies | ||||||||||||
50–99 | 7,618 | 855 | 200 | 391 | 180 | 84 | ||||||
100–249 | 12,045 | 1,989 | 136 | 1,265 | 237 | 351 | ||||||
Large companies | ||||||||||||
250–499 | 10,452 | 1,109 | 78 | 549 | 252 | 231 | ||||||
500–999 | 21,640 | 1,705 | 207 | 572 | 428 | 497 | ||||||
1,000–4,999 | 61,271 | 4,733 | 589 | 2,021 | 1,376 | 747 | ||||||
5,000–9,999 | 68,790 | 4,019 | 667 | 1,371 | 1,157 | 823 | ||||||
10,000–24,999 | 124,057 | 5,790 | 688 | 2,553 | 1,558 | 991 | ||||||
25,000 or more | 272,980 | 10,442 | 919 | 5,630 | 3,182 | 710 |
The 2016 cycle of BRDIS was the last cycle that collected R&D data for companies with five to nine employees and on business innovation activities. The Annual Business Survey, also co-sponsored by NCSES and the U.S. Census Bureau, will collect R&D data from companies with fewer than 10 employees and more comprehensive data on innovation from all companies for 2017 and beyond. Beginning with the 2017 data collection, BRDIS—the Business R&D and Innovation Survey—became the Business Research and Development Survey (BRDS).
In this InfoBrief, money amounts are expressed in current U.S. dollars and are not adjusted for inflation. A company is defined as a business organization located in the United States, either U.S. owned or a U.S. affiliate of a foreign parent company, of one or more establishments under common ownership or control.
The samples for BRDIS and BRDS were selected to represent all for-profit, nonfarm companies that were publicly or privately held and had five or more employees (BRDIS) or 10 or more employees (BRDS) in the United States. Estimates produced from the surveys and presented in this InfoBrief are restricted to companies that performed or funded R&D, either domestically or abroad. Because the statistics from the surveys are based on samples, they are subject to both sampling and nonsampling errors (see technical notes in the data tables reports at https://www.nsf.gov/statistics/srvyindustry/).
For 2016, a total of 44,861 companies were sampled to represent the population of 1,485,151 companies; for 2017, a total of 45,075 companies were sampled, representing 1,097,607 companies. The representative population decreased primarily because the criteria for inclusion in the sample was changed for 2017. Previously, companies with fewer than 5 employees, or less than 10 employees if classified in other nonmanufacturing (ONM), were deemed out of scope. For 2017, companies with fewer than 10 employees, regardless of industry, were deemed out of scope because these companies are now covered in the Annual Business Survey. This change accounted for a decrease in population of approximately 400,000 companies.
The actual numbers of reporting units in the sample that remained within the scope of the survey between sample selection and tabulation were 42,122 for 2016 and 41,998 for 2017. These lower counts represent the number of reporting units that were determined to be within the scope of the survey after all data collected were processed. Reasons for the reduced counts include mergers, acquisitions, and instances where companies had fewer than five paid employees (BRDIS) or ten employees (BRDS) in the United States or had gone out of business in the interim. Of these in-scope reporting units, 80.2% were considered to have met the criteria for a complete response to the 2016 survey; 74.5% met the 2017 complete response criteria. Coverage of the previous year's known positive R&D stratum for 2016 was 84.0%; the coverage rate for 2017 was 84.9%. Industry classification was based on the dominant business activity for domestic R&D performance where available. For reporting units that did not report business activity codes for R&D, the classification used for sampling was assigned.
The full set of data tables from this survey will be available in the report Business Research and Development: 2017 (https://www.nsf.gov/statistics/srvybrds/). Individual data tables and tables with relative standard errors and imputation rates from the 2017 survey are available in advance of the full report. Statistics for new items added to the survey for 2017 are available in the full set of tables, including for R&D paid for by foreign government agencies and by foreign universities, colleges and academic researchers.
Anderson G and Kindlon A. 2019. Indicators of R&D in Small Businesses: Data from the 2009-15 Business R&D and Innovation Survey. InfoBrief NSF 19-316. Alexandria, VA: National Science Foundation, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics. Available at https://www.nsf.gov/statistics/2019/nsf19316/.
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). 2015. Frascati Manual: Guidelines for Collecting and Reporting Data on Research and Experimental Development, The Measurement of Scientific, Technological, and Innovation Activities. Paris. OECD Publishing. Available at https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/science-and-technology/frascati-manual-2015_9789264239012-en.
Shackelford B and Wolfe R. 2016. Five States Account for Half of U.S. Business R&D Performance in 2013: New Data for Metropolitan Areas Available. InfoBrief NSF 16-317. Arlington, VA: National Science Foundation, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics. Available at http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/2016/nsf16317/.
Shackelford B and Wolfe R. 2019. Over Half of U.S. Business R&D Performed in 10 Metropolitan Areas in 2015. InfoBrief NSF 19-322. Alexandra, VA: National Science Foundation, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics. Available at http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/2019/nsf19322/.
[1] Raymond M. Wolfe, Research and Development Statistics Program, National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics, National Science Foundation, 2415 Eisenhower Avenue, Suite W14200, Alexandria, VA 22314 (rwolfe@nsf.gov; 703-292-7789).
[2] The National Science Foundation has co-sponsored an annual business R&D survey since 1953. The Survey of Industrial Research and Development (SIRD) collected data for 1953–2007, and its successor, the Business R&D and Innovation Survey, collected data for 2008–16. Beginning with 2017, the collection of innovation data was moved to the Annual Business Survey, another survey co-sponsored with the U.S. Census Bureau, and the business R&D data collection reported here was renamed the Business Research and Development Survey.
[3] Company size classifications changed for 2017 in response to the revised Frascati Manual (OECD 2015). Anderson and Kindlon (2019) provide estimates of R&D performance and employment using these new classifications over the 2008–15 time period. The authors also compare the trends to those observed in SIRD for the time prior to 2008.
[4] In addition to statistics for all states, below-state level statistics are available in the full set of tables and also in other InfoBriefs; see Shackelford and Wolfe (2016) and (2019).
[5] Determining the amount of domestic net sales and operating revenues was left to the reporting company. However, guidance was given to include revenues from foreign operations and subsidiaries and from discontinued operations and to exclude intracompany transfers, returns, allowances, freight charges, and excise, sales, and other revenue-based taxes.
[6] Employment statistics in this InfoBrief are head counts. Full-time equivalent statistics are available in the data tables. R&D employees include researchers (defined as R&D scientists and engineers and their managers) and the technicians, technologists, and support staff members who work on R&D or who provide direct support to R&D activities.