Search results for "jel:O3"

showing 10 items of 25 documents

French firms’ strategies for protecting their intellectual property

2012

In attempting to protect their innovations, firms can choose from a range of mechanisms, which may be either non-statutory (trade secrets, design complexity, and lead-time advantage over competitors) or statutory (patent, design registration, trademark, copyright). Yet, little is known about how firms do actually make their choices from among these different appropriability mechanisms. The aim of this paper is to determine how French firms’ use of intellectual property protection mechanisms relates to the type of innovation, the characteristics of the market sector in which they operate, the firms’ characteristics, and their human resources strategies. Our empirical model draws on four Fren…

Trademarkbusiness.industryStrategy and Managementjel:C35Competitor analysisManagement Science and Operations ResearchIntellectual propertyMarket sectorIntellectual property rights; Multivariate probit; Appropriability; Innovation; Human resources strategies;Statutory lawManagement of Technology and Innovationjel:O34Economicsjel:O32MarketingHuman resourcesbusinessIndustrial organization
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Competence Utilization for Innovation Capabilities - A Question of Trust?

2015

The purpose of this paper is to show how trust as an organizational value contributes to employee competence utilization in the case of innovation capability. Thus, it is the objective of this paper to analyze the positive impacts, but also potential limits of trust in business management. The research paper uses two different quantitative empirical studies drawn from German and Austrian mid-sized companies to empirically test this interrelation. As a result, the paper determines particular aspects of trust such as accountability, shared norms and the ability to take responsibility to be interrelated with the usage of employee competences and underlines a positive connection between product…

Trust employee competence utilization innovation creativityjel:D83jel:D23lcsh:BusinessTrustemployee competence utilizationinnovationjel:L22jel:O31jel:M11jel:O30jel:L20jel:M14jel:O34jel:L25jel:O32lcsh:HF5001-6182creativityExpert Journal of Business and Management
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The impact of classes of innovators on Technology, Financial Fragility and Economic Growth

2011

In this paper, we study innovation processes and technological change in an agent-based model. By including a behavioral switching among heterogeneous innovative firms, which can endogenously change among three different classes (single innovators, collaborative innovators and imitators) on the base of their R&D expenditures, the model is able to replicate, via simulations, well known industrial dynamic and growth type stylized facts. Moreover, we focus the analysis on the impact of these three innovation categories on micro, meso and macro aggregates. We find that collaborative companies are those having the highest positive impact on the economic system. The model is then used to study th…

jel:C63jel:E32Computational economics business cycle innovation policy technologyjel:E6Computational economics business cycle innovation policy technologyjel:O3jel:O4
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Endogenous firm asymmetry and cooperative R&D in linear duopoly with spillovers

2005

In a linear model ofcost reducing R&D/Cournot competition, firm asymmetry is shown to be sustainable as subgame perfect Nash equilibrium with R&D competition only ifthe productivity of research is sufficiently large relative to the benefits from imitation. In such a case, industry-wide cost reduction and firms asymmetry are increasing and decreasing functions of the spillover rate, respectively. In the absence of spillovers, a symmetric joint lab generates higher consumer surplus and social welfare than a pair ofasymmetric competitors. If spillovers are not too small, asymmetric R&D competition is advantageous toconsumers, but not to firms.

jel:C72jel:L13jel:O32endogenous asymmetry Cournot instability R&D cooperation
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IMPROVEMENT OF THE ASSESSMENT CRITERIA FOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH PROJECTS - A PREMISE OF INCREASING THE UNIVERSITY SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH PERFORMANCE

2013

The National Plan for Research, Development and Innovation 2007 – 2013, called herein the National Plan II, represents the main instrument used to implement the National Strategy for Research, Development and Innovation. Universities play a unique role in the development of the knowledge-based society, through its contribution to knowledge generation, transmission, dissemination and utilization. The essential role of the university is to shape the highly qualified human resource, a process that implies a symbiosis between the education and research, the education system performances contributing in this way to a great extent to the society development. The highly qualified human resource re…

jel:I23jel:O32Assessment criteria; University scientific research; NP II; IDEAS Programme; Exploratory Research Projects.SEA - Practical Application of Science
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Le choix de la forme organisationnelle en matière d’investissement en R&D à l’étranger par les firmes multinationales:la contribution de la théorie d…

2008

(VF)L’objectif de ce papier est d’évaluer la contribution de la théorie des coûts de transaction à l’explication du choix du mode de gouvernance des activités de R&D à l’étranger par les firmes multinationales. Nous avons identifié principalement trois grandes formes organisationnelles en matière d’investissement en R&D à l’étranger:l’internalisation totale, les alliances en R&D et l’externalisation totale (licences unilatérales). Suite à une étude quantitative par le biais d’un questionnaire diffusé auprès de 769 firmes multinationales, nos principaux résultats montrent que le choix de l’internalisation des activités de R&D est favorisé en cas de fréquence élevée des transactions, le choix…

jel:L24formes organisationnelles;théorie des coûts de transaction;R&D;firmes multinationales;organizational forms;transaction costs theory;R&D;multinational firmsjel:O32jel:G34jel:F23
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Política tecnológica y agentes del sistema regional de innovación. Impacto del V PM de I+D de la UE en las regiones españolas

2008

In this paper we analyse the impact of the Fifth EU R&D Framework Programme (1998-2002) in the Spanish regions, considering the characteristics of the respective regional systems of innovation. The starting theoretical framework is the interactive pattern of technological change where the interaction among the different phases of innovation processes and between actors involved is emphasized. The important role that firms play in this process is also underlined. This model links with the concept of regional innovation systems. The contextual character of technological innovation is furthermore highlighted as well as its importance for the effectiveness of technology policies that should res…

jel:O30jel:R58jel:O38Technology policy EU R&D Framework Programmes Spanish regions nationals/regional systems for innovation.jel:H00CIRIEC-España, revista de economía pública, social y cooperativa
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On international spillovers

2012

Abstract This study investigates the role of international spillovers in generating productivity gains for a panel of 24 OECD countries during the period between 1971 and 2004. We use recent techniques developed in a common factor framework to characterize the global interdependence implied by international spillovers and the diffusion mechanisms involved. Consistently with some recent studies in this field, the evidence suggests that there are substantial cross-country spillovers mainly related to R&D and human capital variables, which contribute significantly to productivity.

jel:O31Economics and EconometricsLabour economicsjel:O40Productivity Spillovers R&D Human capital Common factorsEconomicsjel:C23Economic geographyOecd countriesHuman capitalProductivityFinanceEconomics Letters
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Micro evidence for sources of innovation in European countries

2012

This paper investigates sources of product or process innovation, such as investments in research and development, machinery, personnel training and management systems, by examining microdata from eight European countries. We pay particular attention to the effect of research and development in favouring the absorption of new technologies, i.e. the absorptive capacity. Significant positive effects of each source on both product and process innovations are found. Significant evidence of positive absorptive capacity emerges only in firms with low predicted probabilities of introducing innovation.

jel:O31Innovation; Absorption; Microdata; European countriesMicrodataSettore SECS-S/03 - Statistica Economicajel:O32jel:D21InnovationAbsorptionEuropean countries
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On the link between urban location and the involvement of knowledge intensive business services firms in collaboration networks

2013

Knowledge intensive business services firms can play a key role in modern economies by linking localized collaboration networks to global knowledge flows, and by actively serving in support of knowledge diffusion across institutional and sectoral divides. The extent to which they do is dependent on the markets, partners and human resources available locally. This paper uses the unique establishment-level innovation data available in Norway to investigate whether location in urban labour market regions influences the geographical scope of collaborative linkages maintained within and outside the realm of clients. It proceeds to consider whether the diversity of partner types used locally, dom…

jel:O31knowledge intensive business services; urban economies; collaboration; internationalizationjel:L80jel:R11
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