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R&D boundaries of the firm: An estimation of the double-hurdle model on commissioned R&D, joint R&D, and licensing in Japan

Kenta Nakamura and Hiroyuki Odagiri

Economics of Innovation and New Technology, 2005, vol. 14, issue 7, 583-615

Abstract: This paper studies the firm's decisions on in-house R&D and its procurement from outside through commissioned R&D, joint R&D, and technology acquisitions (i.e., licensing-in). Using the data about 14,000 manufacturing firms in Japan, we estimate a modified double-hurdle model in which the first hurdle determines whether the firm should perform any R&D at all and the second hurdle determines whether (and how much) it should perform each mode of procured R&D. The results generally support the two major theories—the transaction cost theory and the capability theory. The estimated positive effects of firm size, in-house R&D intensity, diversification, and vertical integration support the hypothesis that capability is needed for procured R&D, while the estimated positive effect of the index of appropriability by patents supports the hypothesis that this appropriability reduces transaction costs. In addition, we found that information flow from scientific sources and that from transaction-based sources affect the three modes of procured R&D differently.

Keywords: Firm boundaries; Joint R&D; Licensing; Transaction cost; Capability; Double-hurdle model (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2005
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (16)

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DOI: 10.1080/1043859052000344697

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