The Aggregate Effects of the Decline of Disruptive Innovation
Richard Bräuer
IWH Discussion Papers,
Nr. 22,
2023
Abstract
This paper proposes a model that explains both recently documented facts about the decline of disruptive innovation and the decline in productivity growth as the result of large firms trying to monopolize technologies by poaching inventors from disruptive activities. To come to this conclusion, the paper builds an endogenous growth model with inventor labor markets on which firms can interact strategically. To inform this model, I perform an event study of the effect of disruptive inventions on their technology fields using PATSTAT (1980-2010). I document that technology classes without disruption slowly trend towards incrementalism and that after a disruption, more patents get registered and research becomes less incremental.
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The Aggregate Effects of the Decline of Disruptive Innovation ...
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Produktivität
Produktivität: Mehr mit weniger durch besser Die verfügbaren Ressourcen sind begrenzt. Nur wenn wir sie...
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RLPC: Record Linkage Pre-Cleaning - Technische Dokumentation der Routinen
Wilfried Ehrenfeld
IWH Technical Reports,
Nr. 2,
2015
Abstract
Übergeordnetes Ziel des Record-Linkage ist die Zusammenführung verschiedener Datensätze anhand eines eindeutigen Identifizierungsmerkmals. In den uns vorliegenden Fällen handelt es sich primär um Unternehmensdatensätze aus Datenbanken mit Unternehmensmerkmalen (z. B. BvD Amadeus/Dafne), Patentdatensätze (z. B. Patstat oder DPMA) sowie Förderdatensätze (z. B. BMBF Förderkatalog). Diese Datensätze sollen über den Namen der Unternehmen verknüpft werden. Da in der Praxis Unternehmensnamen in verschiedenen Datenbasen uneinheitlich geschrieben werden – beispielsweise die Unternehmensform – ist eine Harmonisierung und Standardisierung notwendig.
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Technological Activities in CEE Countries: A Patent Analysis for the Period 1980-2009
Iciar Dominguez Lacasa, Alexander Giebler
IWH Discussion Papers,
Nr. 2,
2014
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to analyze the technological activities of Central and Eastern European (CEE) economies and to compare them with the technological activities of other world regions. Using data from the EPO World Wide Statistical Database for the period 1980-2009 the analysis is based on counts of priority patent applications over time. In terms of priority patent applications, CEE reduced its technological activities drastically in absolute and per capita terms after 1990. The level of priority patent applications in this world region maintained more recently a stable level below the performance of EU15, South EU and the former USSR. In what concerns technological specialization, the results suggest a division of labor in technological activities among world regions where Europe, Latin America and the former USSR are mainly specializing in sectors losing technological dynamism in the global patent activities (Chemicals and/or Mechanical Engineering) while North America, the Middle East (especially Israel) and Asia Pacific are increasingly specializing in Electrical Engineering, a sector with strong technological opportunities.
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