nep-cse New Economics Papers
on Economics of Strategic Management
Issue of 2013‒09‒13
twelve papers chosen by
Joao Jose de Matos Ferreira
University of the Beira Interior

  1. The Determinants of R&D Investment: An Empirical Survey By Bettina Becker
  2. A taxonomy of manufacturing and service firms in Luxembourg according to technological skills By El Joueidi, Sarah
  3. Sources of spillovers for imitation and innovation By Cappelli, Riccardo; Czarnitzki, Dirk; Kraft, Kornelius
  4. R&D, IP, and firm profits in the automotive supplier industry By Stefan Lutz
  5. INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY AND ECONOMIC TRANSFORMATION:Lessons of five outstanding cases By Hosono, Akio
  6. Competition, strategic delegation and delay in technology adoption By A. Mahati; Rupayan Pal
  7. Clustering Properties of Merger Waves: Space, Time or Industry? By Florian Szücs
  8. THE BRIGHT SIDE OF CORPORATE DIVERSIFICATION: EVIDENCE FROM INTERNAL LABOR MARKETS By Geoffrey Tate; Liu Yang
  9. Do trademarks diminish the substitutability of products in innovative knowledge-intensive services? By Crass, Dirk; Schwiebacher, Franz
  10. THE ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS OF COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO LEARNING ON INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT (POLICY AND MANAGERIAL CAPABILITY LEARNING):A Case of Ethiopia By Shimada, Go
  11. Impact of Renewable Energy Policy and Use on Innovation: A Literature Review By Felix Groba; Barbara Breitschopf
  12. "Strategies and Organizations for Managing "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere"" By Tetsuji Okazaki

  1. By: Bettina Becker (School of Business and Economics, Loughborough University, UK)
    Abstract: This paper offers an extensive survey and a critical discussion of the empirical literature on the driving factors of R&D. These factors are subsumed under five broad types. The paper first summarises the key predictions from theory regarding each type's R&D effect. It then examines for which factors differences in the theoretical predictions can also be found in empirical studies, and for which factors the empirical evidence is more unanimous. As the focus is on the empirical literature, methodological issues are also highlighted. The major factor types identified in the literature are, individual firm or industry characteristics, particularly internal finance and sales; competition in product markets; R&D tax credits and subsidies; location and resource related factors, such as spillovers from university research within close geographic proximity, membership of a research joint venture and cooperation with research centres, and the human capital embodied in knowledge workers; and spillovers from foreign R&D. Although on balance there is a consensus regarding the R&D effects of most factors, there is also variation in results. Recent work suggests that accounting for nonlinearities is one area of research that may explain and encompass contradictory findings.
    Keywords: R&D; R&D policy; innovation policy; financial constraints; competition; public funding; knowledge spillovers.
    JEL: G20 G28 M15
    Date: 2013–08
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:lbo:lbowps:2013_09&r=cse
  2. By: El Joueidi, Sarah
    Abstract: This study uses data on Luxembourg manufacturing and service firms, sourced from CIS, to illustrate empirical methods of firms’ classification according to pattern and intensity of innovation and the use of technology. This topic is of relevance to Luxembourg, as to date no such specific classification exists for this country. Existing classifications are industry-based rather than firm-based which appears inappropriate given the heterogeneity within Luxembourgish industries. Moreover, they neglect the financial services, of primary importance to Luxembourg. Results show that cluster methods are well suited to classify firms for the case at hand. The analysis identifies four clusters exploiting information on the firms' innovation competencies, the technology used, and the human skills. Firms in the sample are classified into 4 groups, named respectively as i) high-technology, ii) medium-high-technology, iii) medium-lowtechnology, iv) low-technology. Characteristics of each group are discussed.
    Keywords: Innovation, classification, taxonomy, innovation surveys, cluster analysis.
    JEL: C1 C10 C8 O3 O30 O31 O38
    Date: 2013–09–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:49532&r=cse
  3. By: Cappelli, Riccardo; Czarnitzki, Dirk; Kraft, Kornelius
    Abstract: We estimate the effect of R&D spillovers on sales realized by products new to the firm (imitation) and new to the market (innovation). It turns out that spillovers from rivals lead to more imitation, while inputs from customers and research institutions enhance original innovation. --
    Keywords: innovation,imitation,spillovers
    JEL: L12 O31 O32
    Date: 2013
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zbw:zewdip:13064&r=cse
  4. By: Stefan Lutz
    Date: 2013
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:man:sespap:1313&r=cse
  5. By: Hosono, Akio
    Abstract: Industrial development, especially industrial structure up-grading and diversification, is considered essential for economic transformation and sustained growth. The objective of this paper is to obtain insights into how crucial factors for industrial development, such as accumulation of knowledge and capabilities, technological innovation, infrastructure, institutions, interact in practice, focusing on several outstanding cases of industrial development, which produced a remarkable economic transformation. In these cases, different factors including investment in infrastructure, technological breakthrough, as well as external factors, triggered the economic transformation, but it could not have happened without continuous accumulation of capabilities and knowledge through learning. In all cases, effective institutions accomplished the role of facilitator or catalyzer of transformation.
    Keywords: industrial development , economic transformation , THAILAND , Brazil BANGLADESH , CHILE , SINGAPORE
    Date: 2013–07–18
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:jic:wpaper:1002&r=cse
  6. By: A. Mahati (Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research); Rupayan Pal (Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research)
    Abstract: This paper examines how strategic managerial delegation affects firms' timing of adoption of a new technology under different modes of product market competition. It demonstrates that delegation has differential impacts on adoption dates under Cournot and Bertrand competition. Delegation with 'own-performance' based incentive schemes always leads to early adoption in markets with Bertrand competition compared to that under no-delegation, but not necessarily so in markets with Cournot competition. It also shows that the ranking of Cournot and Bertrand equilibria in terms of delay in adoption depends on the type of managerial incentive schemes. Adoption occurs earlier (later) in markets with Cournot competition than in markets with Bertrand competition, if product differentiation is high (low), regardless of whether there is no-delegation or delegation with 'own-performance' based incentive schemes. In contrast, under strategic delegation with 'relative-performance' based incentive schemes, adoption dates do not differ across markets with different modes of competition.
    Keywords: Technology adoption, Strategic delegation, Own-performance, Relative-performance, Cournot, Bertrand
    JEL: L13 L22 O31 O32 O33
    Date: 2013–08
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:ind:igiwpp:2013-016&r=cse
  7. By: Florian Szücs
    Abstract: We study the degree of agglomeration of acquisition activity within clusters of temporal, geographic and industrial proximity based on almost 600,000 individual transactions. The findings indicate that significant clustering occurs in time and across industries, while the results on geographic clustering are mixed. This supports the view that merger waves are mostly driven by neoclassical motives.
    Keywords: Merger wave, clustering, acquisitions, neoclassical, behavioral
    JEL: L2 G3
    Date: 2013
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:diw:diwwpp:dp1322&r=cse
  8. By: Geoffrey Tate; Liu Yang
    Abstract: We estimate the labor market consequences of corporate diversification using worker-firm matched data from the U.S. Census Bureau. We find evidence that workers in diversified firms have greater cross-industry mobility. Displaced workers experience significantly smaller losses when they move to a firm in a new industry in which their former firm alsooperates. We also find more active internal labor markets in diversified firms. Diversified firms exploit the option to redeploy workers internally from declining to expanding industries. Though diversified firms pay higher wages to retain workers, their labor is also more productive than focused firms of the same size, age, and industry. Overall, internal labor markets provide a bright side to corporate diversification.
    Date: 2013–08
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cen:wpaper:13-40&r=cse
  9. By: Crass, Dirk; Schwiebacher, Franz
    Abstract: Trademarks are often supposed to reduce substitutability and imitability of product innovations. Using German CIS data for 2010, we provide empirical evidence that trademarking firms assess easy product substitutability as less characteristic for their competitive environment. This is particularly the case for knowledge-intensive service providers, product innovators and firms which consider trademarks as important intellectual property rights. This suggests that trademarks are an important supplementary mechanism to protect innovations in knowledgeintensive services. --
    Keywords: Trademarks,product differentiation,innovation,services
    JEL: O32 O34
    Date: 2013
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zbw:zewdip:13061&r=cse
  10. By: Shimada, Go
    Abstract: Industrialization is the key for sustainable economic growth in Africa. The role of industrial policy has been discussed intensively recently. This paper sheds light on the learning (or learning how to learn) aspect of industrialization policy, proposing a comprehensive approach. A great deal of past literature focuses only on the technological aspects of learning, but industrialization is a multi-faceted task, covering policy planning, policy implementation, and managerial knowledge. This paper took up a case from Ethiopia. The case study confirmed that learning on managerial knowledge improved performance of private firms. It also confirmed that policy learning expanded the policy scope of the government to help private sector development. These two aspects are inseparable, and this comprehensive approach should be used by donor countries for the industrialization of Africa.
    Keywords: industrialization policy, Ethiopia, private firms
    Date: 2013–07–18
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:jic:wpaper:1001&r=cse
  11. By: Felix Groba; Barbara Breitschopf
    Abstract: Technological changes in renewable energy technologies play an important role in the context of climate change as they contribute to a reduction of technology costs and lead to an increasing market penetration of emission reducing technologies. This paper provides a comprehensive literature review highlighting numerous motivations and necessities underlying the introduction of renewable energy policies. Starting with a brief overview on the induced innovation hypothesis, we show that policy intervention has been an effective tool to change relative prices, thus, incentivizing innovation, but that also various influencing factors are at play. We show that the literature agrees on the need for specific renewable energy policies in order to overcome concomitant market failures and barrier. We highlight that technology specific policies are generally understood as necessary complements to environmental non-technology specific policies in order to generate <br /> <br /> adequate demand in energy markets. However, in that respect, we outline the ongoing debate on the effectiveness of different technology specific policies on the demand-pull side and the role of technology-push policies. Additionally we provide a summary on methodological approaches to measure policy efforts and technological change respecting different impact levels and stages within the technological change process. Finally, by focusing on international competitiveness and technology cost we highlight two aspects of the effects renewable technology innovation and respective policy support.
    JEL: N70 O31 O32 O57
    Date: 2013
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:diw:diwwpp:dp1318&r=cse
  12. By: Tetsuji Okazaki (Faculty of Economics, University of Tokyo)
    Abstract:    During the World War II, Japan occupied a large part of East and South East Asia, called "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere" (Daitoa Kyoei Ken). This paper overviews what the Japanese military authorities and the government did to develop the occupied areas in the 1930s and the early 1940s. It is remarkable that different development policies and organizations were applied across occupied areas. In Manchuria, which Japan occupied earlier, after trial and error, a system of planning and control was introduced. By this system, more or less systematic development of industries was undertaken. Meanwhile, in China Proper, the Japanese military authorities and the government prepared the statutory holding companies as channels for investment from Japan, but industrial development was basically entrusted to those holding companies and individual companies affiliated to them. Finally in South East Asia, development was almost totally entrusted to existing Japanese firms.
    Date: 2013–09
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:tky:fseres:2013cf900&r=cse

This nep-cse issue is ©2013 by Joao Jose de Matos Ferreira. It is provided as is without any express or implied warranty. It may be freely redistributed in whole or in part for any purpose. If distributed in part, please include this notice.
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