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The Econometric Society Annual Reports Report of the Treasurer
The Econometric Society Annual Reports Report of the Editors of the Monograph Series
2020 Election of Fellows to the Econometric Society
Submission of Manuscripts to the Econometric Society Monograph Series
The Econometric Society 2020 Annual Report of the President
The Econometric Society Annual Reports Econometrica Referees 2019–2020
Submission of Manuscripts to the Econometric Society Monograph Series
The Econometric Society Annual Reports Report of the Editors 2019–2020
An Empirical Model of R&D Procurement Contests: An Analysis of the DOD SBIR Program
Firms and governments often use R&D contests to incentivize suppliers to develop and deliver innovative products. The optimal design of such contests depends on empirical primitives: the cost of research, the uncertainty in outcomes, and the surplus participants capture. Can R&D contests in real‐world settings be redesigned to increase social surplus? I ask this question in the context of the Department of Defense's Small Business Innovation Research program, a multistage R&D contest. I develop a structural model to estimate the primitives from data on R&D and procurement contracts. I find that the optimal design substantially increases social surplus, and simple design changes in isolation (e.g., inviting more contestants) can capture up to half these gains; however, these changes reduce the DOD's own welfare. These results suggest there is substantial scope for improving the design of real‐world contests but that a designer must balance competing objectives.