Generally speaking, R&D is seen as a main driver of societal and business innovation. The
OECD's
Frascati Manual describes R&D as "creative work undertaken on a systematic basis in order to increase the stock of knowledge, including knowledge of man, culture and society, and the use of this stock of knowledge to devise new applications." R&D expenditure and R&D intensity are two of the key indicators used to monitor resources devoted to science and technology worldwide. R&D intensity has been defined as "the ratio of expenditures by a firm on research and development to the firm's sales." William Leonard has described research intensity as "measured usually by ratios of scientific personnel to total employment or by R&D expenditures/sales" to gains in such variables as productivity, profits, sales, and asset status. Furthermore, it is aimed at increasing "
factor productivity and salable output". There are two types of R&D intensity, calculated as follows: • Direct R&D intensity, calculated by dividing R&D expenditure by output • Indirect R&D intensity, which quantifies the R&D expenditure embodied in the intermediate goods used in the production of another sector and can be calculated using Input-Output Tables ==In enterprises and companies==