Do tax incentives for research increase firm innovation? An RD design for R&D, patents and spillovers

Dechezlepretre, A., Einiö, E., Martin, R., Nguyen, K. & Reenen, J. V.ORCID logo (2016). Do tax incentives for research increase firm innovation? An RD design for R&D, patents and spillovers. (CEP Discussion Paper 1413). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
Copy

We present evidence of the positive causal impacts of research and development (R&D) tax incentives on a firm's own innovation and that of its technological neighbors (spillovers). Exploiting a change in the assets-based size thresholds that determine eligibility for R&D tax relief, we implement a Regression Discontinuity (RD) Design using administrative data. We find statistically and economically significant effects of tax relief on (quality-adjusted) patenting (and R&D) that persist up to seven years after the change. Moreover, we also find causal evidence of R&D spillovers on the innovation of technologically close peer firms. We can rule out elasticities of patenting with respect to the user cost of R&D of under 2 at the 5% level and show evidence that our large effects are likely because the treated group are more likely to be financially constrained.

picture_as_pdf

subject
Published Version

Download

Export as

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core JSON Multiline CSV
Export