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Innovation in Large and Small Firms: An Empirical Analysis

American Economic Review 1988 78(4), 678-690
[We present a model suggesting that innovative output is influenced by R&D and market structure characteristics. Based on a new and direct measure of innovation, we find that (1) the total number of innovations is negatively related to concentration and unionization, and positively related to R&D, skilled labor, and the degree to which large firms comprise the industry; and (2) these determinants have disparate effects on large and small firms.]

Innovation, Market Structure, and Firm Size

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1987 69(4), 567
The hypothesis that the relative innovative advantage between large and small firms is determined by market concentration, the extent of entry barriers, the composition of firm size within the industry, and the overall importance of innovation activity is tested. The authors find that large firms tend to have the relative innovative advantage in industries that are capital intensive, concentrated, highly unionized, and produce a differentiated good. The small firms tend to have the relative advantage in industries that are highly innovative, utilize a large component of skilled labor, and tend to be composed of a relatively high proportion of large firms. Copyright 1987 by MIT Press.

R & D Spillovers and Recipient Firm Size

The Review of Economics and Statistics 1994 76(2), 336
The findings in this paper provide some insight into how small firms are able to innovate. Using a production function approach to relate knowledge generating inputs to innovative output, the empirical results suggest that small firms are the recipients of R&D spillovers from knowledge generated in the R&D centers of their larger counterparts and in universities. Such R&D spillovers are apparently more decisive in promoting the innovative activity of small firms than of large corporations. Copyright 1994 by MIT Press.