We develop a dynamic duopoly, in which firms have to take into account a technological externality, which reduces their innovation costs over time, and an inter-firm spillover, which lowers only the second comer’s R&D costs. This spillover exerts its effect after a disclosure lag. We identify three possible equilibria, which are classified according to the timing of R&D investments, as early, intermediate, and late. The intermediate equilibrium is subgame perfect for a wide parameter range. When the size of the innovation is large, it implies under-investment. Hence, even in the presence of a moderate degree of inter-firm spillover, the competitive equilibrium calls for public policies aimed at increasing the research activity. Focusing on minor innovations ? the case in which according to earlier literature the market outcome implies sub-optimal investment levels ? our results imply that policies aimed at stimulating R&D have to be less sizeable than suggested before.
(2010). Spillovers, disclosure lags, and incentives to innovate: Do oligopolies over-invest in R&D? [journal article - articolo]. In RIVISTA INTERNAZIONALE DI SCIENZE SOCIALI. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/24696
Spillovers, disclosure lags, and incentives to innovate: Do oligopolies over-invest in R&D?
MARTINI, Gianmaria
2010-01-01
Abstract
We develop a dynamic duopoly, in which firms have to take into account a technological externality, which reduces their innovation costs over time, and an inter-firm spillover, which lowers only the second comer’s R&D costs. This spillover exerts its effect after a disclosure lag. We identify three possible equilibria, which are classified according to the timing of R&D investments, as early, intermediate, and late. The intermediate equilibrium is subgame perfect for a wide parameter range. When the size of the innovation is large, it implies under-investment. Hence, even in the presence of a moderate degree of inter-firm spillover, the competitive equilibrium calls for public policies aimed at increasing the research activity. Focusing on minor innovations ? the case in which according to earlier literature the market outcome implies sub-optimal investment levels ? our results imply that policies aimed at stimulating R&D have to be less sizeable than suggested before.File | Dimensione del file | Formato | |
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