Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1021964 Technovation 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The study here analyzes the association between R&D expenditure (as % of GDP) and labor productivity across leading geo-economic players. Empirical evidence seems to show, during the period of analysis, a strong positive association between public and private R&D expenditure. In addition, when R&D spending of business enterprise sector exceeds R&D spending of government sector, the labor productivity tends to growth (economic optimization), ceteris paribus. In general, effects of friction (inertia) on labor productivity growth are displayed by countries whose R&D intensity is driven mainly by R&D expenditure of government sector. Results provide fruitful implications that can support a rational political economy of R&D in order to foster the competitiveness of countries in fast-changing and turbulent markets.

► Public R&D spending has a strong positive association with private R&D expenditure. ► If national private R&D exceeds public R&D, labor productivity tends to growth, ceteris paribus. ► Labor productivity growth has inertia in countries with R&D intensity driven by government sector. ► Countries with higher GDP per capita have private R&D Intensity greater than public R&D Intensity. ► Countries with lower GDP per capita have public R&D intensity higher than private R&D intensity.

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