Publication | Closed Access
The R&D Incentives of Industry Leaders
67
Citations
16
References
1999
Year
Organizational EconomicsLawEndogenous Growth TheoryWelfare ImplicationsIndustrial OrganizationProductivityManagementEconomic AnalysisIndustry Leader FirmsTechnology TransferEconomicsStrategic ManagementMicroeconomicsIncentive MechanismBusinessIncentive-centered DesignBusiness StrategyMarket PowerIndustry Leaders
This paper presents a model to explain why industry leader firms often devote substantial resources to R&D activities and explores the welfare implications of this investment. The key new assumption is that industry leaders can improve their own products more easily than can other firms. When industry leaders have R&D cost advantages, it is optimal for the government to subsidize the R&D expenditures of all firms, subsidize the production expenditures of industry leaders, and tax the profits of new industry leaders. Without government intervention, market forces generate too much creative destruction.
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