Innovation and Growth This page intentionally left blank Innovation and Growth From R&D Strategies of Innovating Firms to Economy-Wide Technological Change Edited by Martin Andersson, Börje Johansson, Charlie Karlsson, and Hans Lööf 1 3 GreatClarendonStreet,Oxford,OX26DP, UnitedKingdom OxfordUniversityPressisadepartmentoftheUniversityofOxford. ItfurtherstheUniversity’sobjectiveofexcellenceinresearch,scholarship, andeducationbypublishingworldwide.Oxfordisaregisteredtrademarkof OxfordUniversityPressintheUKandincertainothercountries #OxfordUniversityPress2012 Themoralrightsoftheauthorshavebeenasserted FirstEditionpublishedin2012 Impression:1 Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced,storedin aretrievalsystem,ortransmitted,inanyformorbyanymeans,withoutthe priorpermissioninwritingofOxfordUniversityPress,orasexpresslypermitted bylaw,bylicenceorundertermsagreedwiththeappropriatereprographics rightsorganization.Enquiriesconcerningreproductionoutsidethescopeofthe aboveshouldbesenttotheRightsDepartment,OxfordUniversityPress,atthe addressabove Youmustnotcirculatethisworkinanyotherform andyoumustimposethissameconditiononanyacquirer BritishLibraryCataloguinginPublicationData Dataavailable LibraryofCongressCataloginginPublicationData Dataavailable ISBN978–0–19–964668–5 PrintedinGreatBritainby MPGBooksGroup,BodminandKing’sLynn Preface This book is part of the outcome of a long-term project on innovation and growth, initiated by the Centre of Excellence for Science and Innovation Studies(CESIS)attheRoyalInstituteofTechnology(KTH)andtheJönköping International Business School (JIBS). The project is financed by the Swedish Governmental Agency for Innovation System (VINNOVA). The first ideas forthisprojectwerecommunicatedwithVINNOVAasearlyas2007and we started to contact the contributing authors shortly after the project was decided. We are happy that authors in this volume found the idea for this book interesting and we are proud of the outcome. We believe that this volume, whichincludescontributionsbyscholarsfromdifferentdisciplines,working with different types of data and methods, but centred on a core issue of innovating firms, heterogeneity, and economy-wide effects, will fill a gap in the literature. The set of contributing authors is composed of respected scholarswithaninternationallyrecognizedexpertisewithinspecificcontexts of the relationship between innovation and growth. The volume comprises contributions and perspectives from both economics and business scholars, working in particular in the fields of international business and business strategy. We maintain that innovation research is a field where these disci- plinesshouldandindeeddomeeteachother. We have of course had a lot of support from our colleagues and home universities in this project. We primarily wish to thank Kerstin Ferroukhi at JIBS for all her help with administrative and organizational matters. We are also grateful to Pardis Nabavi Larijani at KTH for helping us to format the manuscripttofittheguidelinesfromOxfordUniversityPress.Finally,weowe gratitudetoAdamSwallowandAimeeWrightatOxfordUniversity Pressfor allhelpandconstructivecommentsonthebookvolume. Duringthisprojectweorganizedfourworkshopswheretheprojectpartici- pants (i.e. the contributing authors) met and presented chapter drafts, exchanged ideas and discussed various issues. A first workshop took place in Autumn 2009, and was hosted by the School of Public Policy, George MasonUniversity,FairfaxVA,USA.Wearegratefulinparticulartoprofessors Preface Kingsley Haynes, Roger Stough, and David Hart for making this workshop possibleattheirinstitutionandforalltheirhelpandsupportintheprepara- tions. The second workshop was hosted by the Institute for Economic GeographyandGIScienceattheViennaUniversityofBusinessandEconom- ics in Vienna, Austria, in April 2010. We wish to thank Professor Manfred Fischer for making this possible and Thomas Seyffertitz for helping us with all practical matters such as booking of hotel rooms, workshop rooms, and restaurants.ThethirdworkshoptookplaceattheGuöVärdshusinBlekingein June2010.ForthiseventweacknowledgeadministrativehelpfromEleonore Huang Vogel at the Blekinge Institute of Technology (BTH), and financial support from BTH Innovation and the School of Management at BTH. The last workshop was arranged at JIBS in Jönköping to coincide with the 50th European Congress of the Regional Science International, August 2010, and weherewishtothankKerstinFerroukhiforallherhelpinthepreparations. November2011 JönköpingandStockholm MartinAndersson,BörjeJohansson, CharlieKarlsson,HansLööf vi Contents ListofFigures ix ListofTables xi Abbreviations xiv NotesonContributors xv Introduction:InnovationandGrowth—FromR&DStrategiesof InnovatingFirmstoEconomy-WideTechnologicalChange 1 MartinAndersson,BörjeJohansson,CharlieKarlsson,andHansLööf PartI. UnderstandingtheR&DStrategiesoftheInnovatingFirm 1. ManagingKnowledgeWithinandOutsidetheMultinational Corporation 21 PaulAlmeidaandAnuPhene 2. TheDynamicsofInnovationStrategies 38 BartVerspagenandTommyHøyvardeClausen 3. SuperstarSubsidiariesoftheMultinationalCorporation: InSearchofOriginsandDrivers 57 KatarinaBlomkvist,PhilipKappen,andIvoZander 4. KnowledgeAccessionStrategiesandtheSpatial OrganizationofR&D 88 JohnCantwellandFengZhang PartII. Firm-LevelReturntoR&DStrategies 5. HowGoodArePatentsasInnovationIndicators? EvidencefromGermanCISData 115 AlfredKleinknechtandHenkJanReinders 6. TheImportanceofProcessandProductInnovationfor ProductivityinFrenchManufacturingandServiceIndustries 128 JacquesMairesseandStephaneRobin Contents 7. R&DCollaborationandInnovativePerformance 160 RenéBelderbos,GeertDuysters,andAnnaSabidussi 8. R&DStrategyandFirmPerformance:WhatIstheLong-Run ImpactofPersistentR&D? 182 HansLööf,BörjeJohansson,MartinAndersson,andCharlieKarlsson PartIII. BeyondtheFirm:Economy-WideEffectsofR&DStrategies 9. TechnologicalCongruenceandProductivityGrowth 209 CristianoAntonelli 10. Spillover,Linkages,andProductivityGrowthintheUSEconomy, 1958to2007 233 EdwardN.Wolff 11. R&DSpillovers,Entrepreneurship,andGrowth 266 ZoltanJ.Acs 12. InnovationandGrowth:ATechnicalorEntrepreneurialResidual? 286 PontusBraunerhjelm 13. FrameworkConditionsforHigh-PotentialEntrepreneurship: ATheoreticalStructureanditsImplications 317 DavidM.Hart IV. Reflections AuthorIndex 339 SubjectIndex 342 viii List of Figures 1 Cumulativedistributionoffirmsaccordingtovalueaddedperemployee andgrossprofitsperemployee 6 1.1 Knowledgemanagementandmanagerialability 33 3.1 Numberofentriesintotechnologiesnewtotheentiremultinational group(USPTOclasses)—SKF’sGermansubsidiary 63 3.2 Numberofentriesintotechnologiesnewtotheentiremultinational group(USPTOclasses)—AlfaLaval’sUSsubsidiary 63 3.3 Criticaldriversofsuperstarsubsidiarydevelopment 79 5.1 Percentagesofinnovatorsthatapplyforpatents 119 5.2 Averagepropensitiestopatentproductinnovationsacrossindustries: Threeindependentsourcescompared(foreachsource,themeanisset equalto100) 119 7.1 TrendsinR&Dalliances 162 7.2 PerformancedriversofR&Dcooperation 164 7.3 Therelationshipbetweenalliancesandinnovativeperformance (inpercentages) 168 8.1 Salesperemployee1997–2006.1,000SEK.Currentprices 192 8.2 Valueaddedperemployee1997–2006.1,000SEK.Currentprices 192 8.3 Exportsperemployee1997–2006.1,000SEK.Currentprices 193 9.1 Frontierofpossibleinnovationsincapital-andlabour-abundant countries 216 9.2 Outputelasticityandcongruenceefficiency 225 12.1a ThenumberofstudentswithatertiaryeducationinChina,theEU, Japan,andtheUSA,2000–2008 289 12.1b ThenumberofstudentswitharesearcheducationinChina,theEU, Japan,andtheUSA,2000–2008 290 12.2 R&DexpendituresinrelationtoGDPandannualgrowthin33 OECDcountries,2001–2009 290 12.3 EU’sinnovationperformanceindexandGDPlevelpercapita, 2006–2010 291
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