Innovation races: An experimental study on strategic research activities

In an experimental setting, firms in a duopoly market engage in a patent tournament and compete for profit-enhancing product advancements. The firms generate income by matching exogenously defined demand preferences with an appropriately composed product portfolio of their own. Demand preferences are initially unknown and first need to be revealed by an investigation of the possible product variations. The better firms approximate demand preferences, the higher their profits. In the ensuing innovation race, firms interact through information spillovers resulting from the imperfect appropriability of research successes. In the random period of the experiment, the continuity of the search process is disturbed by an exogenous shock that affects both the supply and demand side and again spurs research competition. Firms may henceforth explore an enlarged product space in attempting to match the equally modified demand preferences. In our analysis, we explore the behavioral regularities of agents who are engaged in innovation activities. As a key element we test to what extend relative economic performance exercises a stimulating effect on the implementation of innovation and imitation strategies.

[1]  S. Winter,et al.  An evolutionary theory of economic change , 1983 .

[2]  Ben Greiner,et al.  An Online Recruitment System for Economic Experiments , 2004 .

[3]  Wesley M. Cohen,et al.  Firm Size and the Nature of Innovation within Industries: The Case of Process and Product R&D , 1996 .

[4]  J. Lerner An Empirical Exploration of a Technology Race , 1997 .

[5]  Jennifer F. Reinganum A DYNAMIC GAME OF R AND D: PATENT PROTECTION AND COMPETITIVE BEHAVIOR' , 1982 .

[6]  J. Vickers,et al.  Racing with Uncertainty , 1987 .

[7]  P. Dasgupta,et al.  Uncertainty, Industrial Structure, and the Speed of R&D , 1980 .

[8]  J. Kornai,et al.  From Socialism to Capitalism and Democracy , 2003 .

[9]  C. Shapiro,et al.  R&D Rivalry with Licensing or Imitation , 1987 .

[10]  Peter Kischka,et al.  A Decision Rule Based on the Conditional Value at Risk , 2005 .

[11]  Daniel John Zizzo,et al.  Racing with uncertainty: A patent race experiment , 2002 .

[12]  Uwe Cantner,et al.  Knowledge and Creative Destruction over the Industry Life Cycle - The Case of the German Automobile Industry , 2005 .

[13]  Jens J. Krüger,et al.  Knowledge compensation in the German automobile industry , 2011 .

[14]  David J Sternberg,et al.  Strategic innovation. , 2021, Marketing health services.

[15]  R. Isaac,et al.  Appropriability and Market Structure in a Stochastic Invention Model , 1988 .

[16]  George Hendrikse,et al.  The Theory of Industrial Organization , 1989 .

[17]  John Vickers,et al.  The Evolution of Market Structure When There Is a Sequence of Innovations , 1986 .

[18]  David B. Audretsch,et al.  Innovation in Large and Small Firms: An Empirical Analysis , 1988 .

[19]  Werner Güth,et al.  Competition in Innovation and Imitation - A Theoretical and Experimental Study - , 2004 .

[20]  R. Isaac,et al.  Schumpeterian competition in experimental markets , 1992 .

[21]  Dirk Schiereck,et al.  Jenaer Schriften zur Wirtschaftswissenschaft Consolidation and Market Power of Energy Utilities-The case of US-American and German Utility Takeovers , 2005 .

[22]  Andrew Schotter,et al.  Asymmetric Tournaments, Equal Opportunity Laws, and Affirmative Action: Some Experimental Results , 1992 .

[23]  Roland Helm,et al.  Zum Aufbau von Vertrauen in interaktiven Entscheidungsprozessen , 2005 .

[24]  Roland Helm,et al.  New Firms from Research-based Spin-offs , 2005 .

[25]  O. Stark A Relative Deprivation Approach to Performance Incentives in Career , 1990 .

[26]  Reinhard Meckl,et al.  Jenaer Schriften zur Wirtschaftswissenschaft Empirical evidence for a theory of international new ventures , 2005 .

[27]  Donato Masciandaro,et al.  Financial Supervision Fragmentation and Central Bank Independence: The Two Sides of the Same Coin? , 2005 .

[28]  S. Winter,et al.  An Evolutionary Theory of Economic Change.by Richard R. Nelson; Sidney G. Winter , 1987 .

[29]  Jennifer F. Reinganum Uncertain Innovation and the Persistence of Monopoly , 1982 .