2017
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2966933
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Implications of Tax Policy for Innovation and Aggregate Productivity Growth

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Cited by 7 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…They focus on the extent to which the intensity of incumbent firms' investments in innovation scales with their size, whereas we focus on characterizing the dynamics of aggregate productivity and welfare in response to changes in innovation policy. Ferraro et al (2017) present numerical results on the aggregate impact of various tax policies in an endogenous growth model in which incumbent firms (which are identical in equilibrium) invest to improve their own products and entering firms invest to add new products. 4 Our framework does not nest some recent models discussed in the literature, including Lentz and Mortensen (2008), Akcigit and Kerr (2010), the second model considered in Luttmer (2011), Lentz and Mortensen (2016), and Peters (2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They focus on the extent to which the intensity of incumbent firms' investments in innovation scales with their size, whereas we focus on characterizing the dynamics of aggregate productivity and welfare in response to changes in innovation policy. Ferraro et al (2017) present numerical results on the aggregate impact of various tax policies in an endogenous growth model in which incumbent firms (which are identical in equilibrium) invest to improve their own products and entering firms invest to add new products. 4 Our framework does not nest some recent models discussed in the literature, including Lentz and Mortensen (2008), Akcigit and Kerr (2010), the second model considered in Luttmer (2011), Lentz and Mortensen (2016), and Peters (2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They focus on the extent to which the intensity of incumbent firms' investments in innovation scales with their size, whereas we focus on characterizing the dynamics of aggregate productivity and welfare in response to changes in innovation policy. Ferraro et al (2017) present numerical results on the aggregate impact of various tax policies in an endogenous growth model in which incumbent firms (which are identical in equilibrium) invest to improve their own products and entering firms invest to add new products. 4 Our framework does not nest some recent models discussed in the literature, including Lentz and Mortensen (2008), Akcigit and Kerr (2018), the second model considered in Luttmer (2011), Lentz and Mortensen (2016), and Peters (2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…3 For examples of analyses of the impact of tax policies on aggregate productivity through their impact on firms' investments in innovation, see McGrattan and Prescott (2005), Peretto (2007), Acemoglu (2009), Jaimovich and Rebelo (2017), and Ferraro et al (2017). Karahan et al (2016) study the impact of changes in the growth rate of the labor force on firm entry, and Comin and Gertler (2006), De Loecker and Eeckhout (2017) and Edmond et al (2018) study the macroeconomic implications of changes in markups.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%