1988
DOI: 10.2307/135304
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Costs of Production, Intra- and Interindustry R&D Spillovers: Canadian Evidence

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Cited by 134 publications
(79 citation statements)
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“…A full discussion of this issue, however, is beyond the scope of the present paper. 1987198819891990199219931994 (b) * signifies 5 per cent significance level (c) Estimation conducted using a fixed effects estimator and including measure of minimum efficient scale, average plant age, industry growth and full set of time dummies, (d) manufacturing is broken into a total of 68 sectors (e) sample period is 1973-1995 …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A full discussion of this issue, however, is beyond the scope of the present paper. 1987198819891990199219931994 (b) * signifies 5 per cent significance level (c) Estimation conducted using a fixed effects estimator and including measure of minimum efficient scale, average plant age, industry growth and full set of time dummies, (d) manufacturing is broken into a total of 68 sectors (e) sample period is 1973-1995 …”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bernstein (1988) and Jaffe (1986) find that interindustry spillovers have more effects on cost reduction than intraindustry spillovers. Bernstein finds that unit costs decrease more in response to an increase in intraindustry (interindustry) spillovers in industries with large (small) R&D cost shares.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The first measures the influence of R&D spillovers econometrically by treating spillovers as an unweighted sum of the R&D of all other firms or industries. Examples are Levin andReiss (1984, 1989); Levin (1988); Bernstein (1988); and Bernstein and Nadiri (1989). The second measures the R&D spillover variable as a weighted sum of all external R&D. The papers using this approach can be further subdivided into four subgroups, according to the proximity measure used to construct the weights.…”
Section: Comparisons With Other Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%