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The return on R&D versus capital expenditures in pharmaceutical and chemical industries
48
Citations
40
References
2003
Year
Firm PerformanceEducationCost Of CapitalEndogenous Growth TheoryProductivityCapital ExpendituresEconomic AnalysisEconomicsChemical IndustriesAccountingPharmacoeconomicsInvestment StrategyFirm ProfitabilityFinanceReal InvestmentBusinessBusiness StrategyFinancial StructureCapital Structure
The impact of research and development (R&D) on firm performance is generally agreed to be positive, but the nature and extent of this impact share little agreement in the previous research. Using an improved, time series, cross-sectional regression model that accounts for both contemporaneous and firm-specific serial correlation, as well as the feedback between firm profitability and investments, our study compares the rate of return from a dollar investment on R&D to a dollar investment on fixed assets in pharmaceutical and chemical industries. We find positive associations of R&D intensity and all variables of firm performance (net margin, operating margin, sales growth, and market value). We find that an investment in R&D earns an operating margin return much higher than the industry cost of capital. We also find that the effect of an investment in R&D on the firm's market value is about twice as much the effect of an investment in fixed assets. These findings have implications for corporate investment strategies, indicating that additional R&D investment is more likely to provide a firm with a unique and sustainable competitive advantage.
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