International Comparisons of R&D Expenditure: Does an R&D PPP Make a Difference?

37 Pages Posted: 12 Jan 2007 Last revised: 23 Jul 2022

See all articles by Sean Michael Dougherty

Sean Michael Dougherty

OECD Economics Department

Robert Inklaar

University of Groningen - Department of Economics

Robert H. McGuckin

The Conference Board (U.S.)

Bart van Ark

University of Groningen - Department of Economics; Alliance Manchester Business School

Date Written: January 2007

Abstract

Purchasing power parities (PPPs) for R&D expenditure in 19 manufacturing industries are developed for France, Germany, Japan, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom relative to the United States for the years 1997 and 1987. These PPPs are based on R&D input prices for specific cost categories and differ substantially from current practice of comparing R&D expenditure using GDP PPPs and deflators. After taking into account differences in the relative price of R&D labor and materials, separate PPPs for other R&D cost categories are less essential, and a simpler version using GDP PPPs for these other categories should suffice. Our preferred PPPs are used to compare international R&D costs and intensity. The results suggest that the efforts devoted to R&D in each country are more similar across countries than is apparent using the nominal R&D intensities that are currently the norm.

Suggested Citation

Dougherty, Sean Michael and Inklaar, Robert and McGuckin, Robert H. and van Ark, Bart, International Comparisons of R&D Expenditure: Does an R&D PPP Make a Difference? (January 2007). NBER Working Paper No. w12829, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=956868

Sean Michael Dougherty (Contact Author)

OECD Economics Department ( email )

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Robert Inklaar

University of Groningen - Department of Economics ( email )

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Robert H. McGuckin

The Conference Board (U.S.) ( email )

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Bart Van Ark

University of Groningen - Department of Economics ( email )

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Alliance Manchester Business School ( email )

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