Publication | Closed Access
Labor mobility of scientists, technological diffusion, and the firm's patenting decision
201
Citations
17
References
2005
Year
Labor MobilityInnovating FirmTechnological DiffusionLawIndustrial OrganizationPatent AnalysisProductivityTechnology DiffusionManagementInnovating Firm PatentsPatent PoolIntellectual PropertyTechnology TransferEconomicsMergers And AcquisitionsResearch CommercializationTechnological RegimeInnovationHigh Patent-rTechnological ChangeBusinessScience And Technology StudiesInnovation PolicyTechnologyPatentability
We develop and test a model of the patenting and R&D decisions of an innovating firm whose scientist-employees sometimes quit to join or start a rival. In our model, the innovating firm patents to protect itself from its employees. We show theoretically that the risk of a scientist's departure reduces the firm's R&D expenditures and raises its propensity to patent an innovation. We find evidence from firm-level panel data that is consistent with this latter result. Our results suggest that scientists' turnover is associated with cross-industry patenting variation and with recent economy-wide increases in patenting. Scientists' turnover may also partly account for why small firms have high patent-R&D ratios.
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