| Article ID: | iaor2017459 |
| Volume: | 47 |
| Issue: | 1 |
| Start Page Number: | 141 |
| End Page Number: | 157 |
| Publication Date: | Jan 2017 |
| Journal: | R&D Management |
| Authors: | Lpez Iturriaga Flix J, Lpez-Milln Emilio J |
| Keywords: | innovation, management, investment, law & law enforcement, statistics: empirical |
We combine agency theory with the law and finance approach to analyze how the legal protection of investors and the corporate ownership structure affect corporate investment in research and development (R&D). We use information from 956 firms from the five most R&D‐intensive industries in 19 developed countries. Our results show that better protection of investors’ rights by the institutional environment has a positive influence on corporate R&D. We also find that corporate ownership concentration works as a substitute for legal protection. This finding means that R&D investment of the firms in the countries with poor legal protection increases as ownership becomes more concentrated. Our results also show that the identity of shareholders has a relevant effect: Whereas banks and nonfinancial institutions as shareholders result in lower R&D, institutional investors as shareholders increase corporate investment in R&D.