nep-knm New Economics Papers
on Knowledge Management and Knowledge Economy
Issue of 2016‒04‒09
nine papers chosen by
Laura Ştefănescu
Centrul European de Studii Manageriale în Administrarea Afacerilor

  1. A note on innovations from subjective ideas maps By Goorha, Prateek
  2. Partial Knowledge Restrictions on the Two-Stage Threshold Model of Choice By Paola Manzini; Marco Mariotti; Christopher J. Tyson
  3. Localization of Knowledge-creating Establishments By Inoue, Hiroyasu; Nakajima, Kentaro; Saito, Yukiko Umeno
  4. The path of innovation: purchasing and supplier involvement into new product development By Davide Luzzini; Markus Amann; Federico Caniato; Michael Essig; Stefano Ronchi
  5. Biophysical limits of current debates on degrowth and the knowledge economy By Jesus Ramos-Martin
  6. Key Success Drivers in Public Research Grants: Funding the Seeds of Radical Innovation in Academia? By Albert Banal-Estañol; Inés Macho-Stadler; David Pérez-Castrillo
  7. Foreign aid, education and lifelong learning in Africa By Asongu, Simplice; Tchamyou, Vanessa
  8. Endogenous Growth, Green Innovation and GDP Deceleration in a World with Polluting Production Inputs By Kerstin Burghaus; Peter Funk
  9. Growth and welfare effects of intellectual property rights when consumers differ in income By Christian Kiedaisch

  1. By: Goorha, Prateek
    Abstract: In this note the author proposes an approach to examine how innovations might arise from a knowledge commons with agents that interact on the basis of their subjective assessment of the relationships between ideas. Two types of knowledge commons emerge from this dynamic - a pure knowledge commons, with a pursuit of knowledge for its own sake and a satisficing knowledge commons, where members seek a predetermined value for their ideas.
    Keywords: idea maps,knowledge commons,innovation,subjectivity
    JEL: D85 O34
    Date: 2016
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zbw:ifwedp:201615&r=knm
  2. By: Paola Manzini (University of St. Andrews and IZA); Marco Mariotti (Queen Mary University of London); Christopher J. Tyson (Queen Mary University of London)
    Abstract: In the context of the two-stage threshold model of decision making, with the agent's choices determined by the interaction of three "structural variables," we study the restrictions on behavior that arise when one or more variables are exogenously known. Our results supply necessary and sufficient conditions for consistency with the model for all possible states of partial knowledge, and for both single- and multi-valued choice functions.
    Keywords: Attention, Revealed preference, Salience, Satisficing
    JEL: D01 D03
    Date: 2016–03
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:qmw:qmwecw:wp790&r=knm
  3. By: Inoue, Hiroyasu; Nakajima, Kentaro; Saito, Yukiko Umeno
    Abstract: This study investigates the localization of establishment-level knowledge creation using data from a Japanese patent database. Using distance-based methods, we obtain the following results. First, Japanese patent-creating establishments are significantly localized at the 5% level, with a localization range of approximately 80 km. Second, localization is observed for all patent technology classes, and the extent of localization has a positive relationship with the level of technology measured by R&D investment. Finally, the extent of localization is stronger for establishments that are more productive in terms of both the number of patents and the number of citations received, i.e., quantitatively and qualitatively. These results indicate that geographical proximity is important for knowledge spillover, particularly for knowledge-demanding establishments.
    Keywords: Knowledge spillover, Agglomeration, Micro-geographic data
    JEL: R11
    Date: 2016–03
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hit:remfce:47&r=knm
  4. By: Davide Luzzini (Audencia Recherche - Audencia); Markus Amann (Bundeswehr University Munich); Federico Caniato (Politecnico di Milano [Milan]); Michael Essig (Bundeswehr University Munich); Stefano Ronchi (Politecnico di Milano [Milan])
    Abstract: This paper aims to investigate the effects of supplier collaboration on the firm innovation performance as well as the enabling characteristics of the purchasing function. This is an original contribution as few papers empirically test the effect of supplier collaboration (meant as supplier involvement, development, and integration) on innovation performance and –simultaneously – the contribution of strategic sourcing activities and purchasing knowledge. Also, we explore the technological uncertainty of the purchase as an important contingent factor that might influence the firm’s innovation strategy and the emphasis on supplier collaboration or strategic sourcing. Towards this end, we develop a theoretical framework and test it through a survey conducted on a sample of 498 companies worldwide. Results show that innovation, as a category priority, does lead to emphasize supplier collaboration and strategic sourcing which, in turn, ensure better innovation performance. Empirical evidence also shows that, on the one hand, adequate purchasing (managers) knowledge enables greater supplier collaboration and strategic sourcing; on the other hand, technological uncertainty put greater emphasis on innovation strategy as well as on strategic sourcing.
    Keywords: Innovation, Supplier collaboration, Strategic sourcing, Purchasing knowledge, Technological uncertainty
    Date: 2015
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:hal:journl:hal-01289738&r=knm
  5. By: Jesus Ramos-Martin (Facultad Latinoamericana de Ciencias Sociales, Ecuador)
    Abstract: New or revived concepts such as degrowth and the knowledge economy represent a necessary criticism to the conventional view on economic growth, especially in regard to their environmental criticism. Both ideas are related as degrowth needs the application of knowledge in order to be operationalised and both share as a desirable outcome the reduction of working time. However, both concepts also bear common flaws in their criticism, due to the lack of attention in their analysis of the biophysical side of the economic process that has been analysed in approaches such as societal metabolism. The document discusses these weaknesses with the aim of stirring the much needed debate on the limits to growth.
    Keywords: Degrowth, knowledge, sustainability, complexity, societal metabolism
    JEL: O11 O44 Q43 Q57
    Date: 2016–03
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:flc:flcwps:2016_04&r=knm
  6. By: Albert Banal-Estañol; Inés Macho-Stadler; David Pérez-Castrillo
    Abstract: We study what makes a research grant application successful in terms of ability, type of research, experience, and demographics of the applicants. But our main objective is to investigate whether public funding organizations support the teams that are most likely to undertake transformative or "radical" research. Making use of the literature on recombinant innovation, we characterize such "radical teams" as those formed by eclectic and non-usual collaborators, and those that are heterogeneous and scientifically diverse. Our results, using data from the UK's Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), show that the more able, more basic, and more senior researchers, working in a top university, are more likely to be successful. But, radical teams are less likely to be funded by funding bodies. Our analysis of the research output of the awarded projects suggests that, voluntarily or involuntarily, the evaluation process in these organizations is biased against radical teams.
    Keywords: radical innovation, funding organizations, research grants
    JEL: O32 I23
    Date: 2016–03
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:bge:wpaper:890&r=knm
  7. By: Asongu, Simplice; Tchamyou, Vanessa
    Abstract: This study investigates the effect of foreign aid on education and lifelong learning in 53 African countries for the period 1996-2010. Three main issues are assessed, notably: (i) the effect of aid on education; (ii) the incremental impact of aid on education and (iii) the effect of aid on lifelong learning. Lifelong learning is measured as the combined knowledge acquired during the primary, secondary and tertiary levels of education. Foreign aid dynamics include: Total aid, aid from Multilateral Donors (MD) and aid from the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) countries. The empirical evidence is based on an endogeneity-robust Generalized Method of Moments. The following findings are established. First, the aid variables have positive effects on primary school enrolment and lifelong learning, with the exception of aid from MD which positively affects only lifelong learning. Second, the positive effect on primary school enrolment consistently has a higher magnitude compared to the corresponding impact on lifelong learning. Third, the effects of aid dynamics on secondary and tertiary school enrolments are not significant. We also contribute to the literature by proposing an indicator of lifelong learning for developing countries.
    Keywords: Lifelong learning; Foreign aid; Development; Africa
    JEL: F35 I20 I28 O55 P16
    Date: 2015–10
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:70240&r=knm
  8. By: Kerstin Burghaus; Peter Funk
    Abstract: We study economic growth and pollution control in a model with endogenous rate and direction of technical change. Economic growth results from growth in the quantity and productivity of polluting intermediates. Pollution can be controlled by reducing the pollution intensity of a given quantity through costly research (green innovation) and by reducing the share of polluting intermediate quantity in GDP. Without clean substitutes, saving on polluting inputs implies that the rate of GDP growth remains below productivity growth (deceleration). While neither green innovation nor deceleration is chosen under laissez-faire, both contribute to long-run optimal pollution control for reasonable parameter values.
    Keywords: Endogenous Growth, Direction of Technical Change, Pollution, Green Innovation, Rebound Effect
    JEL: O30 O41 O44 Q55
    Date: 2016–02–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:kls:series:0084&r=knm
  9. By: Christian Kiedaisch
    Abstract: This paper analyzes how changing the expected length of intellectual property right (IPR) protection affects growth and the welfare of rich and poor consumers. The analysis is based on a product-variety model with non-homothetic preferences and endogenous markups in which, in accordance with empirical evidence, rich households consume a larger variety of goods than poorer ones. Unlike in models with homothetic preferences, the effect of intellectual property (IP) protection on growth depends on the distribution of income: when the length of IP protection is (uniformly) increased, growth increases when there is inequality among households consuming IP protected goods, but stays constant when there is no such inequality. When wealth is unequally distributed, reducing the length of IP protection for new but not for previously issued IPRs can increase growth. In the case where increasing the length of IP protection increases growth, poor households prefer a shorter length of protection than richer ones, although they consume fewer IP protected goods.
    Keywords: Intellectual property rights, income distribution, endogenous growth, nonhomothetic preferences
    JEL: O34 O31 L16 D30 O15
    Date: 2016–03
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:zur:econwp:221&r=knm

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