FDI, R&D and endogenous competitiveness
Working paper
View/ Open
Date
2008-01Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Discussion papers (SAM) [663]
Abstract
We analyze the influence of endogenous competitiveness on multinational activity. Competitiveness is endogenized by assuming that
firms differ on R&D commitment power, i.e.: some firms are leaders
in R&D. We show that firms with higher commitment power tend to
invest more in R&D and consequently also tend to be more competitive than rivals that lack such capability. As a result, firms with higher
commitment power have higher propensity to become multinationals
than firms with lower commitment power. In addition, the former
use the R&D leader advantage to compel the latter to not enter the
market or, in case of entry, to force them to adopt the domestic strategy. Therefore, in addition to the proximity-concentration trade-off,
we identify another FDI determinant: strategic technological competitiveness.
Publisher
Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration. Department of EconomicsSeries
Discussion paper2008:1