R&D Cooperation: Determinants, persistence and its effects on firms' innovative performance

Author

Badillo Enciso, Erika Raquel

Director

Moreno Serrano, Rosina

Tutor

Moreno Serrano, Rosina

Date of defense

2015-03-20

Legal Deposit

B 10412-2015

Pages

179 p.



Department/Institute

Universitat de Barcelona. Departament d'Econometria, Estadística i Economia Espanyola

Abstract

This doctoral thesis consists of three different empirical studies which represent new contributions to the empirical research of firms’ R&D cooperation behaviour, one of the most relevant research issues in the field of Economics of Innovation. The three studies that constitute the dissertation focus on the Spanish case. The first empirical chapter analyses the heterogeneity in firms’ decisions to engage in R&D cooperation, taking into account the type of partner (competitors, suppliers or customers, and research institutions) and the sector to which the firm belongs (manufactures or services), while controlling for the possible correlation between such R&D cooperation strategies. In general terms, the results suggest that determinants of R&D cooperation differ between the different types of cooperation and between the two sectors under consideration. Placing a higher importance to publicly available information (incoming spillovers), receiving public funding and firm size increases the probability of cooperation with all kind of partners but the role is much stronger in the case of cooperative agreements with research institutions and universities. The results also suggest that R&D intensity and the importance attributed to the lack of qualified personnel as a factor hampering innovation are key factors influencing positively the decisions to cooperate in the service sector but they do not seem to affect these decisions in the manufacturing sector. The aim of the second study is to analyse if R&D collaborative agreements are persistent at the firm level, and in such a case, to study what are the main drivers of this phenomenon. R&D cooperation activities at the firm level can be persistent due to true state dependence, this implying that cooperating in a given period enhances the probability of doing it in the subsequent period and it can also be a consequence of firms’ individual heterogeneity, so that certain firms have certain characteristics that make them more likely to carry out technological alliances. A second objective of this study is to evaluate the differentiated persistence pattern of collaboration agreements for three different types of partners: customers and/or suppliers, competitors and institutions. The results suggest that firms are persistent in cooperation activities as a strategy to carry out their innovation activities. There is a significant state dependence effect for cooperation even once it considers the different types of cooperation separately. In this case, the highest persistence is found in the case of collaboration with institutions, followed by customers and clients. The results also suggest that institutional cooperation may provide the basis and tools for forming future agreements with other type of collaboration partner vertical or horizontal. The third empirical chapter examines the impact that the geographical scope of collaborative research may have on innovation performance. This study advances beyond the studies on the differences between national and international cooperation with respect to the impact on innovation output by disaggregating the geographical scope of the international alliances as well as analysing if absorptive capacity is equally important for national and international research alliances. The obtained results allow to conclude that the benefits of research collaboration differ across different dimensions of the geography. The result suggest that firms benefit from interaction with international partners as a way to access new technologies, specialized or novel knowledge that they are unable to find locally. In addition, that research collaboration simultaneously with partners in different geographical areas leads to better innovation performance if compared to collaborations exclusively with partners geographically closer. Regarding the role played by absorptive capacity on the relationship between collaboration research and innovation performance, it can be conclude that a firm can learn more from its foreign partners, with different culture and environment, but if the firm possesses the potential capacity to acquire and assimilate such new knowledge, the benefit from cooperation increases.


Esta tesis doctoral consiste en tres estudios empíricos diferentes que representan nuevas contribuciones a la investigación empírica del comportamiento de cooperación en innovación de las empresas, el cual es uno de los temas más relevantes en el campo de la Economía de la Innovación. Los tres estudios que constituyen esta tesis se centran en el caso español y utiliza el Panel de Innovación Tecnológica de las Empresas Españolas (PITEC). En el primer estudio se analiza la heterogeneidad en las decisiones de las firmas a participar en acuerdos de cooperación para la innovación, tomando en cuenta el tipo de socio (competidores, proveedores y/o clientes e instituciones de investigación) y el sector al que pertenece la firma (manufacturas y servicios). El segundo estudio empírico aporta evidencia sobre el comportamiento dinámico de la cooperación en innovación. El objetivo principal consiste en analizar si los acuerdos de cooperación son persistentes a nivel de la firma y en tal caso, estudiar cuáles son los principales conductores de este fenómeno de persistencia. También se estudia si existen diferentes patrones de persistencia de los acuerdos de cooperación teniendo en cuenta el tipo de socio separadamente así como también la posibilidad de encontrar persistencia cruzada entre estos tipos de cooperación. Finalmente, el tercer estudio tiene como objetivo estimar el impacto de la cooperación con socios localizados en diferentes áreas geográficas sobre el rendimiento innovador de las empresas. Este capítulo también analiza el rol que juega la capacidad de absorción en la relación entre la cooperación en innovación según el área geográfica de los socios y el rendimiento innovador.

Keywords

Recerca industrial; Investigación industrial; Industrial research; Gestió de la innovació; Gestión de la innovación; Innovation management; Localització industrial; Localización industrial; Industrial location; Espanya; España; Spain

Subjects

332 - Regional economics. Territorial economics. Land economics. Housing economics.

Knowledge Area

Ciències Jurídiques, Econòmiques i Socials

Documents

ERBE_PhD_THESIS.pdf

839.4Kb

 

Rights

ADVERTIMENT. L'accés als continguts d'aquesta tesi doctoral i la seva utilització ha de respectar els drets de la persona autora. Pot ser utilitzada per a consulta o estudi personal, així com en activitats o materials d'investigació i docència en els termes establerts a l'art. 32 del Text Refós de la Llei de Propietat Intel·lectual (RDL 1/1996). Per altres utilitzacions es requereix l'autorització prèvia i expressa de la persona autora. En qualsevol cas, en la utilització dels seus continguts caldrà indicar de forma clara el nom i cognoms de la persona autora i el títol de la tesi doctoral. No s'autoritza la seva reproducció o altres formes d'explotació efectuades amb finalitats de lucre ni la seva comunicació pública des d'un lloc aliè al servei TDX. Tampoc s'autoritza la presentació del seu contingut en una finestra o marc aliè a TDX (framing). Aquesta reserva de drets afecta tant als continguts de la tesi com als seus resums i índexs.

This item appears in the following Collection(s)