The Origins of Industrial Scientific Discoveries
49 Pages Posted: 15 Feb 2008 Last revised: 10 Apr 2022
Date Written: February 2008
Abstract
This paper estimates science production functions for R&D-performing firms in the United States using scientific papers as the measure of output, by analogy with patents. The underlying evidence covers 200 top U.S. R&D firms during 1981-1999 as well as 110 top U.S. universities. We find that industrial science builds on past scientific research inside and outside the firm, with most of the returns to scale in production deriving from outside knowledge. In turn, the largest outside contribution derives from universities rather than firms; this is especially true when papers are weighted by citations received, a measure of their importance. Consistent with the role assigned to knowledge spillovers in growth theory, the importance of outside knowledge, especially that of universities, increases from the firm to the industry level. The findings survive the inclusion of fixed effects, interactions among the effects, variations in sample and specification, and efforts to control for endogeneity.
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
Scientific Teams and Institution Collaborations: Evidence from U.S. Universities, 1981-1999
By James D. Adams, Grant C. Black, ...
-
Who Bears the Growing Cost of Science at Universities?
By Ronald G. Ehrenberg, George H. Jakubson, ...
-
R&D Sourcing, Joint Ventures and Innovation: A Multiple Indicators Approach
By James D. Adams and Mircea Marcu
-
Standing on Academic Shoulders: Measuring Scientific Influence in Universities
By James D. Adams, Roger Clemmons, ...
-
Highly Cited Leaders and the Performance of Research Universities
-
International Knowledge Flows: Evidence from an Inventor-Firm Matched Data Set
By Jinyoung Kim, Sangjoon Lee, ...
-
The Growing Allocative Inefficiency of the U.S. Higher Education Sector
By James D. Adams and Roger Clemmons
-
Science and Industry: Tracing the Flow of Basic Research Through Manufacturing and Trade
By James D. Adams and Roger Clemmons
-
The Nber-Rensselaer Scientific Papers Database: Form, Nature, and Function
By James D. Adams and Roger Clemmons