The paper aims to study the effect of output additionality of public R&D/innovation funding on firm innovation, measured as economic returns of innovation, across firms of different sizes. A panel sample consisting of 4,950 Spanish firms observed during years 2009–2014 has been analysed, using a treatment model. Robustness tests have also been used. The findings show the effects of output additionality of R&D/innovation funding support for small, medium, SMEs and large firms, with a greater effect on large firms and a lower effect on medium firms. However, there has been a weak effect for very large firms, which do not benefit in terms of output additionality. Since it is relatively easy for large firms to benefit from public support for innovation, some of the resources allocated to them should be passed on to small and medium firms. Medium firms seem to be less inclined to benefit from economies of scales than large firms and may be less affected by public innovation policy given the priority for small firms’ development. SMEs can benefit further from well-designed targeting programmes, with a prevalence of demand-side support measures compared to the supply- side measures.

The impact of public support for innovation on output additionality. Differences among small and large firms

Antonio, Prencipe;Danilo, Boffa
2022-01-01

Abstract

The paper aims to study the effect of output additionality of public R&D/innovation funding on firm innovation, measured as economic returns of innovation, across firms of different sizes. A panel sample consisting of 4,950 Spanish firms observed during years 2009–2014 has been analysed, using a treatment model. Robustness tests have also been used. The findings show the effects of output additionality of R&D/innovation funding support for small, medium, SMEs and large firms, with a greater effect on large firms and a lower effect on medium firms. However, there has been a weak effect for very large firms, which do not benefit in terms of output additionality. Since it is relatively easy for large firms to benefit from public support for innovation, some of the resources allocated to them should be passed on to small and medium firms. Medium firms seem to be less inclined to benefit from economies of scales than large firms and may be less affected by public innovation policy given the priority for small firms’ development. SMEs can benefit further from well-designed targeting programmes, with a prevalence of demand-side support measures compared to the supply- side measures.
2022
978-87-94345-09-5
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11575/123300
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