Incorporating Innovation Subsidies in the CDM Framework: Empirical Evidence from Belgium

Forthcoming, The Economics of Innovation and New Technology

31 Pages Posted: 23 Jun 2016

See all articles by Dirk Czarnitzki

Dirk Czarnitzki

KU Leuven - Department of Managerial Economics, Strategy, and Innovation; Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW)

Julie Delanote

KU Leuven - Department of Economics

Date Written: May 2016

Abstract

This paper integrates innovation input and output effects of R&D subsidies into a modified Crépon–Duguet–Mairesse (CDM) model. Our results largely confirm insights of the input additionality literature, i.e. public subsidies complement private R&D investment. In addition, results point to positive output effects of both purely privately funded and subsidy–induced R&D. Furthermore, we do not find evidence of a premium or discount of subsidy–induced R&D in terms of its marginal contribution on new product sales when compared to purely privately financed R&D.

Keywords: CDM model, R&D, subsidies, innovation policy

JEL Classification: C14, C30, O38

Suggested Citation

Czarnitzki, Dirk and Delanote, Julie, Incorporating Innovation Subsidies in the CDM Framework: Empirical Evidence from Belgium (May 2016). Forthcoming, The Economics of Innovation and New Technology, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2799545

Dirk Czarnitzki (Contact Author)

KU Leuven - Department of Managerial Economics, Strategy, and Innovation ( email )

Naamsestraat 69 bus 3500
Leuven, 3000
Belgium

Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW) ( email )

P.O. Box 10 34 43
Mannheim, 68034
Germany

Julie Delanote

KU Leuven - Department of Economics ( email )

Leuven, B-3000
Belgium

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
29
Abstract Views
453
PlumX Metrics