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Market Incentives for Business Innovation: Results from Canada
Authors:Charles Bérubé  Marc Duhamel  Daniel Ershov
Affiliation:(1) Economic Research and Policy Analysis Branch, Industry Canada, Ottawa, Canada;(2) Canadian Institute for Research on Public Policy and Public Administration, Universit? de Moncton, Moncton, Canada;(3) Telecommunications Policy Branch, Industry Canada, Ottawa, Canada
Abstract:
Are more competitive industries more innovative? Empirical investigation into various theories of innovation in industrial organization, agency theory, or endogenous growth, make diverse predictions with respect to this long-standing open question in economics. In this paper, we investigate the empirical relationship between competition intensity and firm innovation using a new micro-database containing a large sample of Canadian manufacturing enterprises over the 2000–05 period. Using three different measures of competition intensity, we find evidence that competition intensity is positively related to firm-level expenditures on research and development (R&D) in Canadian manufacturing industries. However, we also find that this relationship is dampened when more firms are further from the technological frontier of their industry. Nevertheless, the results provide evidence for a Schumpeterian interpretation, whereby market power can increase business incentives for innovation when many firms are technological laggards.
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