Foreign Competition and Innovation

Working Paper: NBER ID: w31840

Authors: Elhanan Helpman

Abstract: Empirical studies have found that enhanced foreign competition can encourage or discourage innovation. To address this relationship, I examine a market structure in which a small number of large multi-product oligopolists compete with a large number of small single-product firms in the same industry. The single-product firms are short-lived while the multi-product firms live forever, and the large firms invest in innovation in order to enlarge their product spans. All firms export. I show that an increase in the competitiveness of foreign firms can increase or reduce innovation efforts of a large multi-product firm. Moreover, changes in the incentives to innovate can be different for more-productive and less-productive oligopolists. As a result, aggregate sectoral innovation may rise or decline, depending on the productivity distribution of the oligopolists. I also show that changes in short-term operating profits may not be aligned with changes in the incentives to invest in innovation.

Keywords: No keywords provided

JEL Codes: D43; F1; L1


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
Increase in foreign competition (F23)Domestic innovation efforts of high-productivity firms (O31)
Increase in foreign competition (F23)Domestic innovation efforts of low-productivity firms (O49)
Short-term operating profits (D25)Change in innovation incentives (O31)

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