We study the product and process innovation choice of firms in which a managerial incentive à la Vickers (1985) is present. Taking a two-stage game approach, we show that managerial firms are led to over-invest in process innovation, as compared to standard profit-maximising firms, while they under-invest in product innovation. The reason is that process innovation allows to decrease cost, and this is consistent with a convenient increase in the production level. On the opposite, product innovation allows increasing price, which is in contrast with the taste for output expansion embodied in the objective function of firms run by managers. Preliminary empirical evidence on Italian companies suggests that in fact the managerial nature...
This paper explores the firm-level relationship between product, process, organizational and marketi...
By exploiting a rich firm level data-base, this paper presents novel empirical evidence on the effec...
We study complementarity between product and process innovation in a monopoly setting. First we con...
We study the product and process innovation choice of firms in which a managerial incentive à la Vic...
This article sheds light on how industry fluctuations affect firms' propensity to innovate. We test ...
We investigate the determinants of innovation activity making a distinction between product and proc...
This paper describes R&D competition between a managerial firm and an entrepreneurial one, in a Cou...
We study complementarity between product and process innovation in a monopoly setting. First we cons...
We investigate the determinants of innovation activity making a distinction between product and proc...
This paper describes R&D competition between a managerial firm and an entrepreneurial one, in a Cou...
The excessive concentration of the innovation literature on product development, its drivers and eff...
We investigate the timing of adoption of product and process innovation by using a differential gam...
This paper describes R&D competition between a managerial firm and an entrepreneurial one, in a ...
We study complementarity between product and process innovation in a monopoly setting. First we con...
This paper explores the firm-level relationship between product, process, organizational and marketi...
By exploiting a rich firm level data-base, this paper presents novel empirical evidence on the effec...
We study complementarity between product and process innovation in a monopoly setting. First we con...
We study the product and process innovation choice of firms in which a managerial incentive à la Vic...
This article sheds light on how industry fluctuations affect firms' propensity to innovate. We test ...
We investigate the determinants of innovation activity making a distinction between product and proc...
This paper describes R&D competition between a managerial firm and an entrepreneurial one, in a Cou...
We study complementarity between product and process innovation in a monopoly setting. First we cons...
We investigate the determinants of innovation activity making a distinction between product and proc...
This paper describes R&D competition between a managerial firm and an entrepreneurial one, in a Cou...
The excessive concentration of the innovation literature on product development, its drivers and eff...
We investigate the timing of adoption of product and process innovation by using a differential gam...
This paper describes R&D competition between a managerial firm and an entrepreneurial one, in a ...
We study complementarity between product and process innovation in a monopoly setting. First we con...
This paper explores the firm-level relationship between product, process, organizational and marketi...
By exploiting a rich firm level data-base, this paper presents novel empirical evidence on the effec...
We study complementarity between product and process innovation in a monopoly setting. First we con...