Inverted-U relationship between innovation and survival: evidence from firm-level UK data
Mehmet Ugur (),
Eshref Trushin,
Edna M. Solomon and
Francesco Guidi
No 14073, Greenwich Papers in Political Economy from University of Greenwich, Greenwich Political Economy Research Centre
Abstract:
Theoretical and empirical work on innovation and firm survival has produced varied and often conflicting findings. In this paper, we draw on Schumpeterian models of competition and innovation and stochastic models of firm dynamics to demonstrate that the conflicting findings may be due to linear specifications of the innovation-survival relationship. We demonstrate that a quadratic specification is appropriate theoretically and fits the data well. Our findings from an unbalanced panel of 39,705 UK firms from 1997-2012 indicate that an inverted-U relationship holds for different types of R&D expenditures and sources of funding. We also report that R&D intensity is more likely to increase survival when firms are in more concentrated industries and in Pavitt technology classes consisting of specialized suppliers of technology and scale-intensive industries. Finally, we report that the effects of firm and industry characteristics as well as macroeconomic environment indicators are all consistent with prior findings. The results are robust to step-wise modeling, controlling for left truncation and use of lagged values to address potential simultaneity bias.
Keywords: innovation; post-entry performance; R&D; survival analysis (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015-06-01
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http://gala.gre.ac.uk/id/eprint/14073/1/GPERC22_Ugur_et_alF.pdf
Related works:
Working Paper: Inverted-U relationship between innovation and survival: Evidence from firm-level UK data (2015) 
Working Paper: Inverted-U relationship between innovation and survival: Evidence from firm-level UK data (2015) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:gpe:wpaper:14073
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