Industry and location effects on UK plants' innovation propensity
This paper uses UK plant-level survey data to examine the relative importance of industry concentration, technological opportunity and locational factors in determining innovation propensity. <p> The results suggest no evidence that industry concentration has any significant positive effect on innovation. Industries' technological characteristics are important, however, with the potential for industry-specific spill-over effects. Plants' own technological activities in terms of undertaking R&D and having an R&D department were also important determinants of innovation propensity as were plants' participation in technology transfer and inter-firm networks. Strong locational effects were identified relating to industrial composition, the level of R&D activity, external ownership, the preponderance of small firms and the general level of regional prosperity. In addition, strong interactions were evident between plants' R&D activity and their regional environment. Undertaking R&D enabled plants to take advantage of any environmental benefits for innovation and insulated them from potential negative effects. <!--ID=""The NIERC contribution to this paper was as part of the Centre's research programme on Innovation and Industrial Change supported by the Department of Economic Development, Northern Ireland. We are grateful for comments on an earlier version of this paper from Nola Hewitt-Dundas (NIERC) and from participants in the European Regional Science Association, 36th European Congress, Zurich, August 1996.-->
Year of publication: |
2001-01-10
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Authors: | Ashcroft, Brian ; Roper, Stephen ; Dunlop, Stewart ; Love, James H. |
Published in: |
The Annals of Regional Science. - Western Regional Science Association - WRSA. - Vol. 34.2000, 4, p. 489-502
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Publisher: |
Western Regional Science Association - WRSA |
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