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Quality Ladders and Product Cycles

Gene M. Grossman1; Elhanan Helpman2

1 Princeton University · 2 Tel Aviv University

Quarterly Journal of Economics 1991 open access

We develop a two-country model of endogenous innovation and imitation in order to study the interactions between these two processes. Firms in the North race to bring out the next generation of a set of technology-intensive products. Each product potentially can be improved a countably infinite number of times, but quality improvements require the investment of resources and entail uncertain prospects of success. In the South entrepreneurs invest resources in order to learn the production processes that have been developed in the North. All R&D investment decisions are made by forward-looking, profit-maximizing entrepreneurs. The steady-state equilibrium is characterized by constant aggregate rates of innovation and imitation. We study how these rates respond to changes in the sizes of the two regions and to policies in each region to promote learning.

DOI
10.2307/2937947
Volume
106 (2)
Pages
557
Export
BibTeX
Sources
crossref openalex