Publication | Open Access
Public Funding for Science and the Value of Corporate R&D Projects; Evidence from Project Initiation and Termination Decisions in Cell Therapy
12
Citations
66
References
2018
Year
Preclinical TherapeuticsOrganizationsCell TherapyScience EthicInnovative FinancingResearch EthicsCellular TherapiesProject InitiationCorporate InnovationNational Innovation PoliciesManagementBioethicsParticular UncertaintiesResearch CommercializationPublic FundingTechnology PolicyInnovationCell Therapy FieldD Project ManagementBusinessTranslational ResearchTherapeutic PatentScience And Technology StudiesInnovation PolicyTechnological Development PolicyMedicineScience Policy
Abstract How do firms decide which R&D projects to pursue and which ones to cast aside? We use a real options approach to advance our understanding of how firms manage uncertainties in R&D project management, in particular uncertainties linked to the external scientific environment. Our findings highlight how these uncertainties have an impact on the initiation and discontinuation of R&D projects. We examine these effects in the context of shifts in US science policy in the cell therapy field, using a dataset on 570 R&D projects in the global cell therapy sector, initiated over the period 1986–2011. We find decreased R&D project initiation rates and higher discontinuation rates for projects initiated by US firms in the aftermath of policy shifts that increased uncertainties about public funding support for US cell therapy research. We also highlight how this effect was reversed as the US public funding outlook for such research recovered.
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