RD Cooperation Between Firms and Universities: Some Empirical Evidence from Belgian Manufacturing

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP3951

Authors: Reinhilde Veugelers; Bruno Cassiman

Abstract: This Paper presents an econometric analysis of firm and industry characteristics conducive to cooperation with universities, using Community Innovation Survey data for Belgium. We find that large firms are more likely to have cooperative agreements with universities. These agreements are formed whenever risk is not an important obstacle to innovation, and typically serve to share costs. Consistent with the open science paradigm, we find no evidence for the importance of the capacity to appropriate the returns from innovation for explaining cooperative agreements with universities. We do argue that cooperating with universities is complementary to other innovation activities such as performing own R&D, sourcing public information and cooperative agreements with suppliers and customers. Therefore, the decision to cooperate with universities cannot be analysed in isolation from the overall innovation strategy of the firm.

Keywords: cooperation with universities; industry-science links; innovation strategy

JEL Codes: L13; O32; O34


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
firm size (L25)likelihood of cooperation (C71)
cost constraints (D24)likelihood of cooperation (C71)
risk perceptions (D81)likelihood of cooperation (C71)
appropriability conditions (P14)likelihood of cooperation (C71)
complementarity with other innovation activities (O36)likelihood of cooperation (C71)

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