2010
DOI: 10.1002/smj.850
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Do leading or lagging firms learn more from exporting?

Abstract: An interesting theoretical debate arises when considering firm heterogeneity in learning from exporting. One perspective intimates that technologically lagging firms stand to benefit more from exporting because exposure to technological knowledge in foreign markets allows these firms to close the gap with their more technologically endowed counterparts. A contrasting perspective posits that technologically superior firms benefit more from exporting since these firms are better equipped to translate knowledge a… Show more

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Cited by 163 publications
(160 citation statements)
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References 80 publications
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“…Patents measure something "above and beyond R&D inputs, a creation of an underlying knowledge stock" (Hall, Griliches & Hausman, 1986) and provide an observable indicator of a firm's technological capabilities (Adegbesan & Higgins, 2010). Patent data can accurately capture the intellectual property of a firm and therefore have been widely used to measure innovation performance (e.g., Hall, Jaffe & Trajtenberg, 2001;Adegbesan & Higgins, 2010;Salomon & Jin, 2010).…”
Section: Data and Samplingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Patents measure something "above and beyond R&D inputs, a creation of an underlying knowledge stock" (Hall, Griliches & Hausman, 1986) and provide an observable indicator of a firm's technological capabilities (Adegbesan & Higgins, 2010). Patent data can accurately capture the intellectual property of a firm and therefore have been widely used to measure innovation performance (e.g., Hall, Jaffe & Trajtenberg, 2001;Adegbesan & Higgins, 2010;Salomon & Jin, 2010).…”
Section: Data and Samplingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…with international markets as a key knowledge resource (e.g., Salomon & Jin 2010). This may allow managers to better deal with uncertainty in the export marketplace by providing key export market-based knowledge that enables them to better identify which available strategy options best match the specific requirements of the target export market (e.g., Fang et al…”
Section: From This Perspective Internationalization Theory Views Invmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For individual EU countries, several studies rely on data from Spanish manufacturers to analyse the relationship between internationalization and innovation. Salomon and Jin (2010) find that exporting raises productivity regardless of the level of innovative capacity. Kafouros et al (2008) show that internationalization increases the firm's capacity to raise productivity through innovation, while Monreal-Pérez et al…”
mentioning
confidence: 87%