nep-knm New Economics Papers
on Knowledge Management and Knowledge Economy
Issue of 2017‒08‒06
seven papers chosen by
Laura Ştefănescu
Centrul European de Studii Manageriale în Administrarea Afacerilor

  1. Knowledge flows, firms' competencies, and patent citations: an analysis of the trajectory of IBM By Jorge Britto; Leonardo Costa Ribeiro; Lucas Araújo; Eduardo da Motta e Albuquerque
  2. Brevet d’invention et croissance économique : une analyse dans le cadre de l’économie tunisienne durant la période 1970 - 2010 By Mabrouki, Mohamed
  3. Knowledge-Intensive Mining Services: a Regional Approach for their Development in Chile By Claudio Bravo-Ortega; Leonardo Muñoz
  4. Effects of Foreign Direct Investment on Intellectual Property, Patents and R&D By Arun, Korhan; Yıldırım, Durmuş Çağrı
  5. The Young, the Old and the Innovative: The Impact of R&D on Firm Performance in ICT versus Other Sectors By Koutroumpis, Pantelis; Leiponen, Aija; Thomas, Llewellyn D W
  6. NEET Policies and Knowledge in Arab & East Central European Economies By Driouchi, Ahmed; Harkat, Tahar
  7. Innovation and location in German knowledge intensive business service firms By Brunow, Stephan; Hammer, Andrea; Mc Cann, Philip

  1. By: Jorge Britto (UFF, Brazil); Leonardo Costa Ribeiro (Inmetro, Brazil); Lucas Araújo (UFF, Brazil); Eduardo da Motta e Albuquerque (CEDEPLAR/UFMG, Brazil)
    Abstract: In a knowledge economy, the creation, distribution and use of knowledge become decisive factors to reinforce firms' competitiveness. At the firm level, the process of innovation involves, fundamentally, the creation of new knowledge, which implies the integration and recombination of existing knowledge that may come from different sources and locations. The analytical difficulties to deal with this subject generate a literature that tries to quantify and analyze knowledge flows between economic agents using patent citations. Those citations may provide clues for intra and inter-firms knowledge flows. The paper analyses information about patents granted by IBM in the USPTO, which is used to map knowledge flows and to correlate these flows with the evolution of IBM competences and growth strategies.
    Keywords: Patent Citations; Knowledge flows; Firms Competences, IBM Competences; IBM Strategy
    JEL: O32 O34 O39
    Date: 2017–07
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:cdp:texdis:td561&r=knm
  2. By: Mabrouki, Mohamed
    Abstract: This study aims to empirically analyze the relationship between patent and economic growth, adopting the VAR approach. Indeed, in order to determine whether, in the context of the Tunisian economy and in the period from 1975 to 2010, the development of technological innovation promotes economic growth , we test an intuition of endogenous growth theory , analyzing the relationship between product growth rate (GDP) and the number of growth rates of patents filed by residents. The results indicate a statistically significant positive effect between patents filed during the previous period (t-1) and current economic growth (t). What reflects the importance of knowledge as being a decisive factor of growth.
    Keywords: Patent , Innovation, Growth , VAR , Tunisia
    JEL: C1 C22 O31 O4 O47
    Date: 2017–01
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:80485&r=knm
  3. By: Claudio Bravo-Ortega; Leonardo Muñoz
    Abstract: Governments in every country are concerned about the local economic development within each country’s region. In this vein, the case of mining industry draws attention in its trend of establishing enclave economies rather than cluster dynamics at the local level. In the case of the mining industry one might estate that there is no room for local economic development based on a strong industrial fabric if no directed policies are set and implemented. This paper’s objective is to understand how the backward and forward linkages approach is a key argument to inform regional industrial and vertical initiatives that aim to upgrade mining suppliers’ technological capacities. Based on the strategic design revision of the public-private programs for mining suppliers’ development and five case studies, we explore whether those implemented initiatives are being locally translated into mining regions. We find that the regional approach is nearly nonexistent in public policies implemented in the last 12 years. From our perspective, this lack of the regional approach makes it difficult to visualize direct effects from public-private policies on local firms’ performance. All these issues contribute inputs for scoping the design and deployment of policy tools for local economic development.
    Date: 2017–07
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:udc:wpaper:wp448&r=knm
  4. By: Arun, Korhan; Yıldırım, Durmuş Çağrı
    Abstract: As innovative firms have considerable competitive advantage; more foreign direct investment (FDI) research has been related to the innovation. The primary aim of this study is to explore how intra-regional economies interact with host countries’ innovative performance, and how they are affected by FDI. Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey, located in the South Caucasus region, are selected as examples. Numbers of patent applications, R&D expenditure (% of GDP), and intellectual property payments are chosen as factors indicative of innovation. While this research tries to explore whether these three countries, connected by large trades, can act as a clustered group; Panel cointegration and Panel OLS models are used for analysis. The results show that FDI is an important variable affecting the level of innovation in the panel analysis. Nevertheless, individual relationships with FDI vary, and cointegration analysis shows heterogeneity. That is, foreign direct investment could play a central role in increasing the level of innovation for Azerbaijan and Georgia, but it is not an important determinant of Turkey's economic innovation level. Countries should realize that when their economies are becoming stronger, FDI is not a useful tool for escalating innovation, rather they should be in clusters that can leverage innovation.
    Keywords: Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), Innovation, Panel Data Analysis, Panel OLS, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Georgia
    JEL: F21 O32 O34
    Date: 2017–06
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:80470&r=knm
  5. By: Koutroumpis, Pantelis; Leiponen, Aija; Thomas, Llewellyn D W
    Abstract: Although innovation opportunities within the ICT industry are assumed high in comparison with other industries because of their rapidly evolving technological trajectory, little empirical research systematically investigates the distribution of returns to R&D investment across industries and types of firms. Building on the technological opportunity framework, we examine the effect of R&D on firm revenues in a large panel of European firms and study its variation with the age, size, and sub-sector of firms. We confirm that R&D investments in ICT firms have a larger effect on their revenue performance when compared to non-ICT firms and that the effect is higher for small firms and for firms in Internet services and ICT component manufacturing. At the firm level, our results suggest that smaller and, surprisingly, older ICT firms are technologically opportunistic and exhibit the flexibility and adaptability to both identify and respond to technological opportunities and develop innovative products and services. We highlight some implications for R&D investment and policy.
    Keywords: ICT, R&D, firm performance, technological opportunity, firm age, firm size
    JEL: O31 O32 D24
    Date: 2017–08–02
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:rif:wpaper:51&r=knm
  6. By: Driouchi, Ahmed; Harkat, Tahar
    Abstract: Abstract This research analyzes the policies related to those youth that are not in education, not in employment, and not in training (NEETs) in the Arab and the East Central European (ECE) countries. It attempts assessing the impacts of knowledge on policies related to NEETs. The empirical framework used is based on measures of knowledge such as the number of reports published by the European Training Foundation (ETF) for each country. The number of studies that relate to education, training, and to the labor markets represent the independent variables. Furthermore, this paper assumes that joining the European Union, as it is the case for ECE countries, benefits these economies through the available strategies and policies related to youth, mostly to the NEET category. Findings indicate that the more publications for a specific country, the more the NEETs decrease. Still, among the studied Arab countries, only Algeria and Morocco show this trend. For ECE countries, only Bulgaria and Slovak Republic benefit from joining the European Union (EU) by reducing the category of youth that are NEETs with the remaining countries having no statistically significant effects. These findings require that further knowledge is needed mainly in Arab countries even though Morocco and Algeria appear to behave differently. Such a knowledge is likely to induce more policies targeting the NEETs.
    Keywords: Keywords: NEETs, Arab, ECE Countries, NEETs, Policies.
    JEL: I32 J68
    Date: 2017–07–29
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:pra:mprapa:80471&r=knm
  7. By: Brunow, Stephan (Institut für Arbeitsmarkt- und Berufsforschung (IAB), Nürnberg [Institute for Employment Research, Nuremberg, Germany]); Hammer, Andrea; Mc Cann, Philip
    Abstract: "Knowledge Intensive Business Services (KIBS) are widely perceived as being important drivers of technological progress and innovation. KIBS are generally understood as depending, driving and thriving on knowledge exchanges and therefore, geographical proximity to markets, customers and suppliers would be expected to be a critical factor in their performance. This paper investigates how the innovation performance and processes of KIBS firms are related to their distance from the nearest city and also to the size of the nearest city. For this purpose we make use of detailed firm level data and consider Germany as a research field. While most current evidence on this topic emerges from Canada, we complements and add to this existing literature on the geography of KIBS by examining these issues in the German spatial setting which largely conforms to a textbook type of spatial urban hierarchy. Our probit results indeed find that there are very strong distance decay and city size effects, and these also vary according to the innovation type." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
    Keywords: Innovation, unternehmensbezogene Dienstleistungen, Wissensarbeit, regionale Faktoren, Stadt-Umland-Beziehungen
    JEL: D22 L84 O31 R12
    Date: 2017–07–24
    URL: http://d.repec.org/n?u=RePEc:iab:iabdpa:201722&r=knm

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