Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
984127 | Research Policy | 2011 | 13 Pages |
This study examines the effect of R&D tax credits on innovation activities of Canadian manufacturing firms. Over the 1997–1999 period the Federal and Provincial R&D tax credit programs were used by more than one third of all manufacturing firms and by close to two thirds of firms in high-technology sectors. We investigate the average effect of R&D tax credits on a series of innovation indicators such as: number of new products, sales with new products, originality of innovation, etc. using a non-parametric matching approach. Compared to a hypothetical situation in the absence of R&D tax credits, recipients of tax credits show significantly better scores on most but not all performance indicators. We therefore conclude that tax credits lead to additional innovation output.