Suen, Richard M.H. (2013): Research Policy and U.S. Economic Growth.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_49103.pdf Download (545kB) | Preview |
Abstract
This paper examines quantitatively the effects of R&D subsidy and government-financed basic research on U.S. economic growth and consumer welfare. To achieve this, we develop an endogenous growth model which takes into account both public and private research investment, and the differences between basic and non-basic research. A calibrated version of the model is able to replicate some important features of the U.S. economy over the period 1953-2009. Our model suggests that government spending on basic research is an effective policy instrument to promote economic growth. Subsidizing private R&D, on the other hand, has no effect on economic growth.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Research Policy and U.S. Economic Growth |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Research Policy, Basic and Applied Research, R&D Spending, Endogenous Growth |
Subjects: | O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O3 - Innovation ; Research and Development ; Technological Change ; Intellectual Property Rights > O31 - Innovation and Invention: Processes and Incentives O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O3 - Innovation ; Research and Development ; Technological Change ; Intellectual Property Rights > O38 - Government Policy O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O4 - Economic Growth and Aggregate Productivity > O41 - One, Two, and Multisector Growth Models |
Item ID: | 49103 |
Depositing User: | Richard M. H. Suen |
Date Deposited: | 16 Aug 2013 04:25 |
Last Modified: | 28 Sep 2019 17:51 |
References: | Adams, J.D., "Fundamental Stocks of Knowledge and Productivity Growth," Journal of Political Economy 98 (1990), 673-702. Aghion, P., C. Harris, P. Howitt and J. Vickers, "Competition, Imitation and Growth with Step-by-Step Innovation," Review of Economic Studies, 68 (2001), 467-492. Aghion, P., and P. Howitt, "A Model of Growth through Creative Destruction," Econometrica 60 (1992), 323-351. Aghion, P., and P. Howitt, "Capital, Innovation, and Growth Accounting," Oxford Review of Economic Policy 23 (2007), 79-93. Aghion, P., and P. Howitt, "Growth with Quality-Improving Innovations: An Integrated Framework," in P. Aghion and S.N. Durlauf, eds., Handbook of Economic Growth, Volume 1A, (Amsterdam: North Holland, 2005), 67-110. Akcigit, U., D. Hanley and N. Serrano-Velarde, "Back to Basics: Basic Research Spillovers, Innovation Policy and Growth," unpublished manuscript, 2012. Anselin, L., A. Varga, and Z. Acs, "Local Geographic Spillovers between University Research and High Technology Innovations," Journal of Urban Economics 42 (1997), 422-448. Arrow, K.J., "The Economic Implications of Learning by Doing," Review of Economic Studies 29 (1962), 155-173. Atkeson, A., and M. Ogaki, "Wealth-varying Intertemporal Elasticities of Substitution: Evidence from Panel and Aggregate Data," Journal of Monetary Economics 38 (1996), 507-534. Audretsch, D.B., and M.P. Feldman, "R&D Spillovers and the Geography of Innovation and Production," American Economic Review 86 (1996), 630-640. Audretsch, D.B., and M.P. Feldman, "Knowledge Spillovers and the Geography of Innovation," in J.V. Henderson and J.F. Thisse, eds., Handbook of Regional and Urban Economics, Volume 4 (Amsterdam: North Holland, 2004), 2713-2739. Barro, R.J., and C.J. Redlick, "Macroeconomic Effects from Government Purchases and Taxes," Quarterly Journal of Economics 126 (2011), 51-102. Barro, R.J., and X. Sala-i-Martin, Economic Growth, 2nd Edition (Cambridge: The MIT Press, 2004). Basu, S., and J.G. Fernald, "Returns to Scale in U.S. Production: Estimates and Implications," Journal of Political Economy 105 (1997), 249-283. Beaver, D., and R. Rosen, "Studies in Scientific Collaboration Part III: Professionalization and the Natural History of Modern Scientific Co-Authorship," Scientometrics 1 (1979), 231-245. Bloom, N., R. Griffith and J. Van Reenan, "Do R&D Tax Credits Work? Evidence from a Panel of Countries 1979-1997," Journal of Public Economics 85 (2002), 1-31. Blundell, R., R. Griffith and F. Windmeijer, "Individual Effects and Dynamics in Count Data Models," Journal of Econometrics 108 (2002), 113-131. Cooley, T.F., and E.C. Prescott, "Economic Growth and Business Cycles," in T.F. Cooley, eds., Frontiers of Business Cycle Research (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995), 1-38. Chen, K., A. İmrohoroğlu and S. İmrohoroğlu, "The Japanese Saving Rate," American Economic Review 96 (2006), 1850-1858. Chu, A.C., G. Cozzi, and S. Galli, "Does Intellectual Monopoly Stimulate or Stifle Innovation?" European Economic Review 56 (2012), 727-746. Chu, C.S., P. Leslie and A. Sorensen, "Nearly Optimal Pricing for Multiproduct Firms," National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. 13916, (2008). Dinopoulos, E., and P. Segerstrom, "A Schumpeterian Model of Protection and Relative Wages," American Economic Review 89 (1999), 450-472. Dougherty, S.M., R. Inklaar, R.H. McGuckin, B. Ark, "International Comparisons of R&D Expenditure: Does an R&D PPP Make a Difference?" in E.R. Berndt and C.R. Hulten, eds., Hard-to-Measure Goods and Services: Essays in Honor of Zvi Griliches, (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2007). Gomme, P., and P. Rupert, "Theory, Measurement and Calibration of Macroeconomic Models," Journal of Monetary Economics 54 (2007), 460-497. Goolsbee, A., "Does Government R&D Policy Mainly Benefit Scientists and Engineers?" American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings 88 (1998), 298-302. Griliches, Z., "Productivity, R and D, and Basic Research at the Firm Level in the 1970's," American Economic Review 76 (1986), 141-154. Grossman, G.M., and E. Helpman, "Quality Ladders in the Theory of Growth," Review of Economic Studies 58 (1991), 43-61. Hall, B.H., "R&D Tax Policy during the 1980s: Success or Failure?" Tax Policy and the Economy 7 (1993), 1-35. Hall, B.H., Z. Griliches and J.A. Hausman, "Patents and R and D: Is There a Lag?" International Economic Review 27 (1986), 265-283. Howitt, P., "Steady Endogenous Growth with Population and R&D Inputs Growing," Journal of Political Economy 107 (1999), 715-730. Impullitti, G., "International Competition and U.S. R&D Subsidies: A Quantitative Welfare Analysis," International Economic Review 51 (2010), 1127-1158. Jaffe, A.B., "Technological Opportunity and Spillovers of R&D: Evidence from Firms' Patents, Profits, and Market Value," American Economic Review 76 (1986), 984-1001. Jaffe, A.B., "Real Effects of Academic Research," American Economic Review 79 (1989), 957-970. Jones, B.F., "The Burden of Knowledge and the `Death of the Renaissance Man': Is Innovation Getting Harder?" Review of Economic Studies 76 (2009), 283-317. Jones, C.I., "R&D-based Models of Economic Growth," Journal of Political Economy 103 (1995), 759-784. Jones, C.I., "Sources of U.S. Economic Growth in a World of Ideas," American Economic Review 92 (2002), 220-239. Jones, C.I., "Growth and Ideas," in P. Aghion and S.N. Durlauf, eds., Handbook of Economic Growth, Volume 1B, (Amsterdam: North Holland, 2005), 1063-1111. Jones, C.I., and J.C. Williams, "Too Much of a Good Thing? The Economics of Investment in R&D," Journal of Economic Growth 5 (2000), 65-85. Katz, J.S., and B.R. Martin, "What is Research Collaboration?" Research Policy 26 (1997), 1-18. Klein, J.T., "Interdisciplinary Teamwork: The Dynamics of Collaboration and Integration," in S.J. Derry, C.D. Schunn and M.A. Gernsbacher, eds., Interdisciplinary Collaboration: An Emerging Cognitive Science (Psychology Press, 2005), 23-50. Kortum, S., "Equilibrium R&D and the Patent-R&D ratio: U.S. Evidence," American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings 83 (1993), 450-457. Lucas Jr., R.E., Models of Business Cycles (Oxford: Blackwell, 1987). Luintel, K.B., and M. Khan, "Basic, Applied and Experimental Knowledge and Productivity: Further Evidence," Economics Letters 111 (2011), 71-74. MacDonald, A.S., "Exchange Rates for National Expenditure on Research and Development," Economic Journal 83 (1973), 477-494. Mansfield, E., "Basic Research and Productivity Increase in Manufacturing," American Economic Review 70 (1980), 863-873. Mansfield, E., "Academic Research Underlying Industrial Innovations: Sources, Characteristics, and Financing," Review of Economics and Statistics 77 (1995), 55-65. Mansfield, E., "Academic Research and Industrial Innovation: An Update of Empirical Findings," Research Policy 26 (1998), 773-776. Mowery, D.C., "The Changing Structure of the U.S. National Innovation System: Implications for International Conflict and Cooperation in R&D Policy," Research Policy 27 (1998), 639-654. Mowery, D.C., "Military R&D and Innovation," in B.H. Hall and N. Rosenberg, eds., Handbook of the Economics of Innovation, Volume 2 (Amsterdam: North Holland, 2010), 1219-1256. Morales, M.F., "Research Policy and Endogenous Growth," Spanish Economic Review 6 (2004), 179-209. Nadiri, M.I., and T.P. Mamuneas, "The Effects of Public Infrastructure and R&D Capital on the Cost Structure and Performance of U.S. Manufacturing Industries," Review of Economics and Statistics 76 (1994), 22-37. Narin, F., K.S. Hamilton and D. Olivastro, "The Increasing Linkage between U.S. Technology and Public Science," Research Policy 26 (1997), 317-330. Norrbin, S.C., "The Relation between Price and Marginal Cost in U.S. Industry: A Contradiction," Journal of Political Economy 101 (1993), 1149-1164. Pakes, A., and Z. Griliches, "Patents and R&D at the Firm Level: A First Look," in Z. Griliches, eds., R&D, Patents, and Productivity (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1984), 55-72. Park, W.G., "A Theoretical Model of Government Research and Growth," Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 34 (1998), 69-85. Parker, J.A., and B. Preston, "Precautionary Saving and Consumption Fluctuations," American Economic Review 95 (2005), 1119-1143. Peretto, P.F., "Technological Change and Population Growth," Journal of Economic Growth 3 (1998), 283-311. Peretto, P.F., "Cost Reduction, Entry, and the Interdependence of Market Structure and Economic Growth," Journal of Monetary Economics 43 (1999), 173-195. Romer, P.M., "Increasing Returns and Long-Run Growth," Journal of Political Economy 94 (1986), 1002-1037. Romer, P.M., "Endogenous Technological Change," Journal of Political Economy 98 (1990), S71-S102. Romer, P.M., "Should the Government Subsidize Supply or Demand in the Market for Scientists and Engineers?" Innovation Policy and the Economy 1 (2001), 221-252. Rosenberg, N., "Why do Firms do Basic Research (with Their Own Money)?" Research Policy 19 (1990), 165-174. Segerstrom, P.S., "Endogenous Growth without Scale Effects," American Economic Review 88 (1998), 1290-1310. Segerstrom, P.S., "The Long-Run Growth Effects of R&D Subsidies," Journal of Economic Growth 5 (2000), 277-305. Shapira, P., and J. Youtie, "The Innovation System and Innovation Policy in the United States," in R. Frietsch and M. Schüller, eds., Competing for Global Innovation Leadership: Innovation Systems and Policies in the USA, EU and Asia, , (Stuttgart: Fraunhofer IRB Verlag, 2010), 5-29. Stephan, P.E., "The Economics of Science," Journal of Economic Literature 34 (1996), 1199-1235. Vissing-Jørgensen, A., "Limited Asset Market Participation and the Elasticity of Intertemporal Substitution," Journal of Political Economy 110 (2002), 825-853. Young, A., "Growth without Scale Effects," Journal of Political Economy 106 (1998), 41-63. Zucker, L.G., M.R. Darby and J. Armstrong, "Geographically Localized Knowledge: Spillovers or Markets?" Economic Inquiry 36 (1998), 65-86. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/49103 |