Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1000514 International Business Review 2012 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

Does innovation lead the firm to export more products, or does a firm's export propensity induce it to innovate? How does a firm's productivity level change this relationship? After confirming that exporters develop more innovations than non-exporters, this study attempts to answer these questions by studying two effects. First, we analyse the impact of innovation on a firm's export activities while addressing potential endogeneity concerns. Second, we examine the impact of export activity on a firm's innovation performance. We must address both questions when considering firm productivity. To this end, we conduct a longitudinal analysis of 14,142 observations of an annual average of 1767 Spanish firms within the manufacturing sector during the period from 2001 to 2008. The results suggest that the self-selection hypothesis adequately explains the observed phenomena. That is, innovation induces firms to increase their export activities. This finding is robust to endogeneity. Nevertheless, firms do not experience any learning-by-exporting effects on the obtaining of product or process innovations. Productivity does not modify any of these relationships.

► Innovation induces firms to increase their export activities. ► This finding is robust to endogeneity. ► No learning-by-exporting effects on product or process innovations. ► Productivity does not modify any of these relationships.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Business and International Management
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