TRADE AND INNOVATION -SYNTHESIS REPORT byNobuo Kiriyama, OECD Trade and Agriculture Directorate Innovation is critical to creating new sources of growth. Trade is one of the framework conditions that can strengthen innovation in the business sector, as set out in the OECD Innovation Strategy in 2010.This paper broadly sets out three channels through which trade affects innovation. First, imports and foreign direct investment (FDI) as well as trade in technology serve as channels of technology diffusion. Second, imports, FDI and technology licensing contribute to intensifying competition, which can affect incentives for innovation. Third, exports can affect innovation as it serves as a learning opportunity and gives incentives for innovative activities.The benefits of technology diffusion depend not only on the channels of diffusion but also on the absorptive capacity (that is, the capacity to assimilate and apply new information), which covers a number of policy agendas that go beyond typical trade policy issues. Multilateral trade liberalisation, including both tariff and non-tariff liberalisation as well as protection of intellectual property, contributes to ensuring the link between trade and innovation that are discussed in this paper.