2021
DOI: 10.1111/radm.12520
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Market dominance, R&D grant funding, and innovation outcomes

Abstract: Which companies should receive government R&D grants? Should R&D grants go to already dominant firms, whom one would expect to execute fully in innovation spending to produce better outcomes? Or, should grants go to firms that are less dominant and might need the funding for innovation? Using a novel proprietary panel dataset of over 26,000 firm‐year observations for Irish firms with 1,825 winning grants, this paper provides support for a strategic or efficiency effect: market dominance moderates grant innovat… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…On the other hand, this approach may render the selection process conservative, which can lead to the error of screening out innovative and disruptive ideas with a low probability of success. In addition, selecting as beneficiaries that already have sufficient capabilities and can operate without government subsidies may result in the undesirable outcome of depriving opportunities from firms that need public help [67]. However, these potential problems can be lessened if the subsidy program is subdivided into separate tracks by industry, size, and R&D stage.…”
Section: Practical Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the other hand, this approach may render the selection process conservative, which can lead to the error of screening out innovative and disruptive ideas with a low probability of success. In addition, selecting as beneficiaries that already have sufficient capabilities and can operate without government subsidies may result in the undesirable outcome of depriving opportunities from firms that need public help [67]. However, these potential problems can be lessened if the subsidy program is subdivided into separate tracks by industry, size, and R&D stage.…”
Section: Practical Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%