Innovation and firm growth: Is R&D worth it?
Innovation and firm growth: Is R&D worth it?
The paper contributes to an emerging literature that critically questions the degree to which R&D, at the centre of national and transnational innovation policies, results in firm growth. The differences in how innovation affects firm growth is explored for small and large publicly quoted US pharmaceutical firms between 1950 and 2008. We observe that the positive impact of R&D on firm growth is highly conditional upon a combination of firm-specific characteristics such as firm size, patenting and persistence in patenting. For small firms, R&D boosts growth for only a subset of firms: namely, those that patent persistently for a minimum of five years. For large pharmaceutical firms, on the other hand, R&D may have a negative impact on growth; potentially resulting from the low R&D productivity these firms have suffered from since the mid-1990s. These results raise important issues around the R&D and firm growth relationship for small and large firms as well the role of persistence in innovation for boosting firm performance.
innovation, persistence, firm growth, pharmaceutical industry
45-62
Demirel, Pelin
687c839d-b7dc-4914-972a-293ab9f014c2
Mazzucato, Mariana
57ce93e5-6a6e-43eb-98d6-2e59ac09f100
31 January 2012
Demirel, Pelin
687c839d-b7dc-4914-972a-293ab9f014c2
Mazzucato, Mariana
57ce93e5-6a6e-43eb-98d6-2e59ac09f100
Demirel, Pelin and Mazzucato, Mariana
(2012)
Innovation and firm growth: Is R&D worth it?
Industry and Innovation, 19 (1), .
(doi:10.1080/13662716.2012.649057).
Abstract
The paper contributes to an emerging literature that critically questions the degree to which R&D, at the centre of national and transnational innovation policies, results in firm growth. The differences in how innovation affects firm growth is explored for small and large publicly quoted US pharmaceutical firms between 1950 and 2008. We observe that the positive impact of R&D on firm growth is highly conditional upon a combination of firm-specific characteristics such as firm size, patenting and persistence in patenting. For small firms, R&D boosts growth for only a subset of firms: namely, those that patent persistently for a minimum of five years. For large pharmaceutical firms, on the other hand, R&D may have a negative impact on growth; potentially resulting from the low R&D productivity these firms have suffered from since the mid-1990s. These results raise important issues around the R&D and firm growth relationship for small and large firms as well the role of persistence in innovation for boosting firm performance.
Text
demirel_mazzucato.pdf
- Version of Record
Restricted to Repository staff only
Request a copy
More information
Published date: 31 January 2012
Keywords:
innovation, persistence, firm growth, pharmaceutical industry
Organisations:
Centre for Innovation & Enterprise
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 377473
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/377473
ISSN: 1366-2716
PURE UUID: 8600e3fb-c47a-4182-a596-093041b8db58
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 10 Jun 2015 15:15
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:04
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Pelin Demirel
Author:
Mariana Mazzucato
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics