- Author
- Lorentzen Torbjørn (University of Bergen), Jakobsen Stig-Erik (Bergen University College)
- Title
- Explaining Innovation : an Empirical Analysis of Industry Data from Norway
- Source
- Journal of Entrepreneurship, Management and Innovation (JEMI), 2016, vol. 12, nr 2, s. 5-27, rys., tab., bibliogr. s. 22-26
- Issue title
- Innovation in Services or Industry and Entrepreneurial Intention
- Keyword
- Innowacje, Region, Przemysł, Modele regresji, Geolokalizacja
Innovations, Region, Industry, Regression models, Geolocalization - Note
- streszcz., summ.
- Country
- Norwegia
Norway - Abstract
- Celem artykułu jest analiza, dlaczego niektóre firmy są innowacyjne, a inne nie. Artykuł łączy różne teorie innowacji poprzez odniesienie do innowacji wewnętrznych, aktywów i zewnętrznych czynników regionalnych. Hipotezy są uzyskiwane z teorii i testowane empirycznie za pomocą regresji logistycznej. Analiza empiryczna wskazuje, że wewnętrzne finansowanie B+R i wielkość firmy są najważniejszymi firmowymi i specyficznymi atrybutami udanej innowacji. Zewnętrzne, regionalne czynniki są również ważne. Z analizy wynika, że firmy zlokalizowane w dużych obszarach miejskich mają znacznie wyższe wskaźniki niż innowacyjne firmy zlokalizowane na peryferiach, a firmy zaangażowane w sieci regionalnej są bardziej skłonne do innowacji w stosunku do firm nie uczestniczących w sieci. Analiza przyczynia się do teoretycznego i empirycznego zrozumienia czynników, które mają wpływ na innowacyjność i rolę, jaką odgrywa innowacja w gospodarce rynkowej. Polityka innowacji powinna być ukierunkowana na rozwój infrastruktury systemu podatkowego i budowlanego, które dają firmom zachęty do inwestowania i alokacji zasobów wewnętrznych w działalność R&D oraz współpracy z innymi w zakresie innowacji. Z punktu widzenia polityki gospodarczej, należy zwrócić uwagę na przeznaczenie większych środków publicznych na obszarach wiejskich, w celu zrekompensowania asymetrycznego podziału środków między centrum a peryferiami. Artykuł przyczynia się do rozwoju literatury naukowej z zakresu innowacyjności, łącząc specyficzną, firmową perspektywę z zasobami wewnętrznymi i perspektywą systemową, która koncentruje się na zasobach zewnętrznych i sieci jako najważniejszej determinanty innowacyjności w firmach. (abstrakt oryginalny)
The objective of the paper is to analyse why some firms innovate while others do not. The paper combines different theories of innovation by relating innovation to internal, firm specific assets and external, regional factors. Hypotheses are derived from theories and tested empirically by using logistic regression. The empirical analysis indicates that internal funding of R&D and size of the firm are the most important firm specific attributes for successful innovation. External, regional factors are also important. The analysis shows that firms located in large urban regions have significantly higher innovation rates than firms located in the periphery, and firms involved in regional networking are more likely to innovate compared to firms not involved in networking. The analysis contributes to a theoretical and empirical understanding of factors that influence on innovation and the role innovation plays in the market economy. Innovation policy should be targeted at developing a tax system and building infrastructure which give firms incentives to invest and allocate internal resources to R&D-activities and collaborate with others in innovation. From an economic policy perspective, consideration should be given to allocating more public resources to rural areas in order to compensate for the asymmetric distribution of resources between the centre and periphery. The paper contributes to the scientific literature of innovation by combining the firm oriented perspective with weight on firm specific, internal resources and a system perspective which focuses on external resources and networking as the most important determinants of innovation in firms. (original abstract) - Full text
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- Cited by
- ISSN
- 2299-7075
- Language
- eng
- URI / DOI
- http://dx.doi.org/10.7341/20161221