Non-excludable and non-rivalrous
Studying patents and hiring ex-employees
Product imitation, cumulative innovation and consumer surplus
Secrecy, first mover advantage (lead time) and complexity
False
True
False
True
Statement A is True
Statement B is True
Investing in an own R&D laboratory.
Sending company researchers to training sessions.
Expanding the R&D workforce by hiring young university graduates.
Appropiation is the degree to which investors can capture the return of their investments. In the context of innovation, since knowledge is a public good, there can be spillovers so that third parties take part of the returns of the investment on innovation.
This makes private returns to R&D lower than the public ones, leading to an insufficient level of R&D investment that generates a deathweight loss.
Valuable information that the firm fails to appropiate. They can come from inputs and outputs:
Inputs -> studying patents, hiring ex-employees
Outputs -> product imitation, cumulative innovation and consumer surplus
They drive down R&D returns and thus fimr's incentives to invest in R&D
IP rights
Informal ways:
Secrecy
Complexity
First-mover advantage
A firm's ability to identify, assimilate and exploit knowledge coming from external sources.
R&D creates a positive internal externality -> the larger one firm's R&D investment, the greater profit it can make from other firms/institution's R&D
Thus, it increases the incentives to invest in R&D and limits appropriability problems.
xi accounts for firm i's R&D investment
Spillovers:
ci(xi,xj)=c-xi-bxj
Absorptive capacity:
ci(xi,xj)=c-xi-B(xi)xj with 0<B(xi)<1
Formal: patents and copytight
Informal: secrecy and lead time
Informal ways tend to be more important for firms because formal ways usually give the firm market power but in exchange they require the firm to make its knowledge public, so other competitors can usually imitate their innovations by changing some characteristics.