nep-ipr New Economics Papers
on Intellectual Property Rights
Issue of 2009‒01‒24
eight papers chosen by
Roland Kirstein
Otto von Guericke University Magdeburg

  1. Poolability and Aggregation Problems of Regional Innovation Data: An Application to Nanomaterial Patenting By Roberto Patuelli; Andrea Vaona; Christoph Grimpe
  2. How Much Does Immigration Boost Innovation? By Hunt, Jennifer; Gauthier-Loiselle, Marjolaine
  3. Managerial incentive and the firms’ propensity to invest in product and process innovation By Cellini, Roberto; Lambertini, Luca; Sterlacchini, Alessandro
  4. The role of R&D in new firm growth By Erik Stam; Karl Wennberg
  5. Innovation, R&D and Productivity - assessing alternative specifications of CDM-models By Johansson, Börje; Lööf, Hans
  6. Persistence of Profits and the Systematic Search for Knowledge - R&D and profits above the norm By Wiberg, Daniel
  7. Intellectual Products, Result of Economic Development By Stegaroiu, Carina-Elena
  8. Creating Innovations, Productivity and Growth - the efficiency of Icelandic firms By Ho, Dong-huyn; Lööf, Hans

  1. By: Roberto Patuelli (University of Lugano, Switzerland and The Rimini Centre for Economic Analysis, Italy); Andrea Vaona (University of Lugano, Switzerland and Kiel Institute for the World Economy, Germany); Christoph Grimpe (ZEW Centre for European Economic Research, Germany and Catholic University of Leuven, Belgium and University of Zurich, Switzerland)
    Abstract: Research and development (R&D) in the field of nanomaterials is expected to be a major driver of innovation and economic growth. In this respect, many countries, as national systems of innovation, have established support programs offering subsidies for industry- and government-funded R&D. Consequently, it is of great interest to understand which factors facilitate the creation of new technological knowledge. The existing literature has typically addressed this question by employing a knowledge production function based on firm-, regional- or even country-level data. Estimating the effects for the entire national system of innovation, however, implicitly assumes poolability of regional data. We apply our reasoning to Germany, which has well-known – and wide – regional disparities, for example between the former East and West. Based on analyses at the level of NUTS-3 regions, we find different knowledge production functions for the East and the West. Moreover, we investigate how our results are affected by the adoption of alternative aggregation levels. Our findings have implications for further research in the field, that is, a careful evaluation of poolability and aggregation is required before estimating knowledge production functions at the regional level. Policy considerations are offered as well.
    Keywords: nanotechnology, patents, poolability, Germany, spatial autocorrelation
    JEL: L60 O32 R11 R12
    Date: 2008–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:rim:rimwps:40-08&r=ipr
  2. By: Hunt, Jennifer (McGill University); Gauthier-Loiselle, Marjolaine (Princeton University)
    Abstract: We measure the extent to which skilled immigrants increase innovation in the United States by exploring individual patenting behavior as well as state-level determinants of patenting. The 2003 National Survey of College Graduates shows that immigrants patent at double the native rate, and that this is entirely accounted for by their disproportionately holding degrees in science and engineering. These data imply that a one percentage point rise in the share of immigrant college graduates in the population increases patents per capita by 6%. This could be an overestimate of immigration's benefit if immigrant inventors crowd out native inventors, or an underestimate if immigrants have positive spill-overs on inventors. Using a 1940-2000 state panel, we show that immigrants do have positive spill-overs, resulting in an increase in patents per capita of 9-18% in response to a one percentage point increase in immigrant college graduates. We isolate the causal effect by instrumenting the change in the share of skilled immigrants in a state with the state's predicted increase in the share of skilled immigrants. We base the latter on the 1940 distribution across states of immigrants from various source regions and the subsequent national increase in skilled immigrants from these regions.
    Keywords: immigration, innovation
    JEL: J61 D24 O32
    Date: 2009–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iza:izadps:dp3921&r=ipr
  3. By: Cellini, Roberto; Lambertini, Luca; Sterlacchini, Alessandro
    Abstract: We study the product and process innovation choice of firms in which a managerial incentive à la Vickers (1985) is present. Taking a two-stage dynamic game approach, we show that managerial firms are led to over-invest in process innovation, as compared to standard profit-maximising firms, while they under-invest in product innovation. The reason is that process innovation allows to decrease cost, and this is consistent with a convenient increase in the production level. On the opposite, product innovation allows increasing price, which is in contrast with the taste for output expansion embodied in the objective function of firms run by managers. Preliminary empirical evidence on Italian companies suggests that in fact the managerial nature of firm associates with significantly smaller efforts in product innovation while the effect on process innovation is positive but non-significant.
    Keywords: Process innovation; Product innovation; R&D; Managerial incentive
    JEL: O32 O31 D43 C72
    Date: 2009–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:12935&r=ipr
  4. By: Erik Stam (Tjalling Koopmans Institute, Utrecht School of Economics, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands; Centre for Technology Management, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom; Scientific Council for Government Policy (WRR), The Hague, The Netherlands; Max Planck Institute of Economics - Entrepreneurship, Growth and Public Policy group, Jena, Germany); Karl Wennberg (Centre for Entrepreneurship and Business Creation, Stockholm School of Economics, Stockholm, Sweden.)
    Abstract: Innovative start-ups are an important driver of economic growth. This article presents empirical evidence on the effects of R&D on new product development, inter-firm alliances and employment growth during the early life course of firms. We use a dataset that contains a sample of new firms that is representative for the whole population of start-ups. This dataset covers the first six years of the life course of firms. R&D reveals to play several roles during the early life course of high tech as well as high growth firms. The effect of initial R&D on high tech firm growth runs via increasing levels of inter-firm alliances in the first post-entry years. R&D efforts enable the exploitation of external knowledge. Initial R&D also stimulates new product development later on in the life course of high tech firms, but this does not seem to affect firm growth. R&D does not affect the growth rate of new low tech firms, which seems to be driven mainly by the growth ambitions of the founding entrepreneur. The results show that R&D matters for a limited but important set of new high tech and high growth firms, which are key in innovation and entrepreneurship policies.
    Keywords: New Firms, Innovation, R&D, firm growth, alliances, product development
    JEL: D21 L23 L25 L26 M13
    Date: 2009–01–12
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:jrp:jrpwrp:2009-004&r=ipr
  5. By: Johansson, Börje (CESIS - Centre of Excellence for Science and Innovation Studies, Royal Institute of Technology); Lööf, Hans (CESIS - Centre of Excellence for Science and Innovation Studies, Royal Institute of Technology)
    Abstract: This paper applies a CDM-model framework to depict the successive links (correlations) between (i) innovation expenditure, (ii) innovation output, and (iii) firm productivity. The CDM model has become popular in many countries among scholars using data from the Community Innovation Survey (CIS). First, the study contrasts a general structural OECD version of the model against a model with country-specific design. Second, the study examines the gains from separating the labour force into ordinary and knowledge labour – as a means to avoid double counting of R&D investments. Third, the paper examines the difference between recognising a firm as a member of an unspecified company group versus a multinational group. Fourth, the paper explores how well sales per employee serves as a proxy for labour productivity proper. Fifth, the paper scrutinises the quality of CIS information by comparing key variables from the voluntary CIS survey with the same variables (for the same firms) recorded in the compulsory and audited register data in Sweden.
    Keywords: Productivity; Innovation; R&D; CDM-model
    JEL: O31 O32
    Date: 2009–01–15
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hhs:cesisp:0159&r=ipr
  6. By: Wiberg, Daniel (CESIS - Centre of Excellence for Science and Innovation Studies, Royal Institute of Technology)
    Abstract: Economic theory tells us that abnormal industry and firm profits will not persist for any length of time. Any industry or firm making profits in excess of the normal rate of return will attract entrants and this competitive process will erode profits. A substantial amount of research however, has found evidence of persistent profits above the norm. Barriers to entry and exit are often put forward as explanation to this anomaly. In the absence of, or with low barriers to entry and exit, this reasoning provides little help in explaining why these above-norm profits arise and persist. In this paper the association between profits and the systematic search for knowledge is investigated. The results show that by investing in research and development firms may succeed in creating products or services that are preferred by the market and/or find a more cost efficient method of production. Corporations that systematically invest in research and development are, by doing so, offsetting the erosion of profits and thereby have profits which persistently diverge from the competitive return. It is argued that even in the absence of significant barriers to entry and exit profits may persist. This can be accredited to a systematic search for knowledge through research and development.
    Keywords: Persistence of profits; research and development; industrial organization
    JEL: L00 L22 L25 O32
    Date: 2009–01–15
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hhs:cesisp:0161&r=ipr
  7. By: Stegaroiu, Carina-Elena
    Abstract: Intellectual products, having the most diverse destinations in different time periods have some premises that have contributed to the intellectual product of necessity, need, application of ideas, level of socio-economic development, levels of exposure and transmission of information time and space
    Keywords: product intellectual; man hypothetical; information; exposure; human society; the application of the idea; the idea generator; generators trade ideas
    JEL: A10
    Date: 2008–11–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:12780&r=ipr
  8. By: Ho, Dong-huyn (CESIS - Centre of Excellence for Science and Innovation Studies, Royal Institute of Technology); Lööf, Hans (CESIS - Centre of Excellence for Science and Innovation Studies, Royal Institute of Technology)
    Abstract: Iceland is one of the smallest European economies and the country was hit severely by the 2008-financial crisis. This paper considers the economy in the period preceding the collapse. Applying a Data Envelopment Analysis on 204 randomly selected firms, the results suggest that a substantial fraction of the Icelandic firms can be classified as non-efficient in their production process. The production scale of many manufacturing firms is too small to be technically efficient, while service firms typically use excessive resources in their production process. A remarkably weak performance in transforming R&D and labour efforts into successful innovations is observed.
    Keywords: Technical efficiency; R&D; Innovation; Productivity
    JEL: C14 D24 O14 O33
    Date: 2009–01–15
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hhs:cesisp:0162&r=ipr

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