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Government policy failure in public support for research and development

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-11-29, 12:33 authored by Mika Haapanen, Helena LenihanHelena Lenihan, Marco Mariani
Promoting Research and Development (R&D) and innovative activity is a key element of the EU Lisbon Agenda and is seen as playing a central part in stimulating economic development. In this paper we argue that, even allowing for benevolent policy-makers, informational asymmetries can lead to a misallocation of public support for R&D, hence government policy failure, with the potential to exacerbate preexisting market failures. Initially, we explore alternative allocation mechanisms for public support, which can help to minimize the scale of these government policy failures. Of these mechanisms (grants, tax credits, or allocation rules based on past performance), our results suggest that none is universally most efficient. Rather, the effectiveness of each allocation rule depends on the severity of financial constraints and on the level of innovative capabilities of the firms themselves.

History

Publication

Policy Studies;35 (6), pp. 557-575

Publisher

Taylor and Francis Ltd

Note

peer-reviewed

Rights

This is an Author's Manuscript of an article whose final and definitive form, the Version of Record, has been published in Policy Studies 2014 copyright Taylor & Francis, available online at: https://doi.org/10.1080/01442872.2014.971728

Language

English

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