Innovation and export activities in the German mechanical engineering sector: an application of testing restrictions in production analysis

Innovation and export activities in the German mechanical engineering sector: an application of testing restrictions in production analysis

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Article ID: iaor20116971
Volume: 36
Issue: 1
Start Page Number: 55
End Page Number: 69
Publication Date: Aug 2011
Journal: Journal of Productivity Analysis
Authors: ,
Keywords: innovation, engineering
Abstract:

Since Solow (1956) the economic literature has widely accepted innovation and technological progress as the central drivers of long-term economic growth. From the microeconomic perspective, this has led to the idea that the growth effects on the macroeconomic level should be reflected in greater competitiveness of the firms. Although innovation effort does not always translate into greater competitiveness, it is recognized that innovation is, in an appropriate sense, unique and differs from other inputs like labor or capital. Nonetheless, often this uniqueness is left unspecified. We analyze two arguments rendering innovation special, the first related to partly non-discretionary innovation input levels and the second to the induced increase in the firm’s competitiveness on the global market. Methodologically the analysis is based on restriction tests in non-parametric frontier models, where we use and extend tests proposed by Simar and Wilson (2001, 2010). The empirical data is taken from the German Community Innovation Survey (2007), where we focus on mechanical engineering firms. Our results are consistent with the explanation of the firms’ inability to freely choose the level of innovation inputs. However, we do not find significant evidence that increased innovation activities correspond to an increase in the ability to serve the global market.

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