Publication | Closed Access
Government grants, private R&D funding and innovation efficiency in transition economy
84
Citations
86
References
2015
Year
Government GrantsEconomic DevelopmentLawEndogenous Growth TheoryInnovation EfficiencyEconomic GrowthIndustrial OrganizationProductivityEconomic AnalysisTechnological InnovationIntellectual PropertyTechnology TransferEconomicsPublic PolicyInnovation EconomicsTechnological RegimeInnovationPrivate REfficiency PotentialsPublic FinanceEconomic PolicyPublic EconomicsBusinessInnovation PolicyTechnologyInnovative Financing
Although the development of the high-tech industry is part of the national agenda of many countries, particularly transition economies, few studies have analysed innovation efficiency in countries with environments unfavourable to high-tech industry development. This study explores the relationships of government grants, private R&D funding and innovation efficiencies of the high-tech industry in China. We use a stochastic frontier analysis model to study the roles of government and market mechanisms in high-tech industry innovation from 1995 to 2008. Findings show that government grants do not crowd out private funding, but stimulate private R&D expenditure. Private R&D funding has positively influenced innovation in the Chinese high-tech industry, and efficiency potentials are widely under-exploited. Additionally, government grants are observed to negatively impact innovation by large firms in the Chinese high-tech industry. Furthermore, we reveal that human capital can promote the innovation performance of high-tech firms, excepting those of medium scale. The findings provide insightful perspectives on China's high-tech industry.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1