A common assumption in innovation policy circles is that creative and inventive firms will help to sustain employment and wages in high wage countries. The view is that firms in high cost production locations that do not innovate are faced with loss of market share from import competition, so jobs move to producers in developing countries with lower labour costs. Domestic firms are encouraged to innovate, and to obtain intellectual property assets to protect their innovations, so that they can sustain local employment and pay high wages. Policies to subsidise R&D and to encourage intellectual property protection are partly justified on these grounds. Nevertheless the available evidence concerning the employment and wage benefits of such act...
This paper is aimed at structurally assessing the employment effects of the innovative activities of...
This paper uses novel data on trade mark activity of UK manufacturing and service sector firms to in...
This paper studies the impact of process and product innovations introduced by firms on their employ...
A common assumption in innovation policy circles is that creative and inventive firms will help to s...
We have constructed a novel panel dataset of UK manufacturing firms to examine how innovation, proxi...
This paper explores the possible job creation effect of innovation activity. We analyze a unique pan...
This paper explores the possible job creation effect of innovation activity. We analyze a unique pan...
This paper explores the possible job creation effect of innovation activity. We analyze a unique pan...
We study the impact of process and product innovations introduced by firms on employment growth with...
We use The Patents (Amendment) Act, 2002 in India as a quasi-natural experiment to identify the caus...
A surprisingly small number of innovative firms use the patent system. In the UK, the share of firms...
The importance of innovation for firm performance is widely recognised but not frequently quantified...
The economic and social roles of Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) are among the most puzzling mys...
The issue of technological unemployment receives perennial popular attention. Although there are pre...
This paper is aimed at structurally assessing the employment effects of the innovative activities of...
This paper uses novel data on trade mark activity of UK manufacturing and service sector firms to in...
This paper studies the impact of process and product innovations introduced by firms on their employ...
A common assumption in innovation policy circles is that creative and inventive firms will help to s...
We have constructed a novel panel dataset of UK manufacturing firms to examine how innovation, proxi...
This paper explores the possible job creation effect of innovation activity. We analyze a unique pan...
This paper explores the possible job creation effect of innovation activity. We analyze a unique pan...
This paper explores the possible job creation effect of innovation activity. We analyze a unique pan...
We study the impact of process and product innovations introduced by firms on employment growth with...
We use The Patents (Amendment) Act, 2002 in India as a quasi-natural experiment to identify the caus...
A surprisingly small number of innovative firms use the patent system. In the UK, the share of firms...
The importance of innovation for firm performance is widely recognised but not frequently quantified...
The economic and social roles of Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) are among the most puzzling mys...
The issue of technological unemployment receives perennial popular attention. Although there are pre...
This paper is aimed at structurally assessing the employment effects of the innovative activities of...
This paper uses novel data on trade mark activity of UK manufacturing and service sector firms to in...
This paper studies the impact of process and product innovations introduced by firms on their employ...