R&D investment responses to R&D subsidies: a theoretical analysis and a microeconometric study
by Tor Jakob Klette; Jarle Møen
World Review of Science, Technology and Sustainable Development (WRSTSD), Vol. 9, No. 2/3/4, 2012

Abstract: Subsidies to the Norwegian high-tech industries have traditionally been given as 'matching grants', i.e., the subsidies are targeted, and the firms have to contribute a 50% own risk capital to the subsidised projects. Our results suggest that grants do not crowd out privately financed R&D, but that subsidised firms do not increase their privately financed R&D either. Hence, the own risk capital seems to be taken from ordinary R&D budgets. We also investigate possible long-run effects of R&D subsidies, and show that conventional R&D investment models predict negative dynamic effects of subsidies. Our data, however, do not support this claim. On the contrary, there are indications of a positive dynamic effect, i.e., temporary R&D subsidies seem to stimulate firms to increase their R&D investments even after the grants have expired. We propose learning-by-doing in R&D activities as a possible explanation for this, and present a theoretical analysis showing that such effects may alter the predictions of the conventional models. A structural, econometric model of R&D investments incorporating such learning effects is estimated with reasonable results.

Online publication date: Thu, 18-Sep-2014

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