Author:
Akhmadi Saltanat,Tsakalerou Mariza
Abstract
Purpose
Innovation output around the world is concentrated in very few economies possessing the requisite skills, knowledge and market acumen to capitalize on emerging technologies. Within the broader European Union, Central and Eastern Europe countries persistently lag in innovation rankings compared to their Western Europe counterparts. The existence of cultural barriers to innovation has been offered as an explanation for the lag, in the sense that perceptions about innovation affect innovation performance. The purpose of this paper is to provide evidence-based analysis on whether there are divergent perceptions at the firm level between East and West.
Design/methodology/approach
The focus is on four countries with distinct socioeconomic profiles (Germany, Poland, Portugal and North Macedonia) for which innovation data of sufficient granularity exist. Using Probit analysis across the regressors of firm size, sector and innovativeness, a detailed picture of perceptions of innovation emerges naturally.
Findings
The analysis demonstrates that there is no discernible East-West cultural divide but rather a palette of shades regarding perceptions of innovation, entrenched in firm-level characteristics. Specifically, firm size colors perceptions of innovation and such perceptions in turn are moderated by whether a firm is involved or not in innovation activities.
Originality/value
A better understanding of innovation culture at the firm level is essential to drive policy interventions aiming to remove barriers to innovation. The results of this study provide sufficient clues for more refined interventions, both internal (“procedures”) and external (“policies”) to the firm, targeting well-defined size segments as well as addressing differently innovative and non-innovative companies.
Subject
Management of Technology and Innovation,General Engineering
Reference38 articles.
1. Abbott, M.G. (n.d.), “Marginal effects in probit models: interpretation and testing”, Lecture, Department of Economics, Queen’s University, available at: http://econ.queensu.ca/faculty/abbott/econ452/452note15.pdf
2. Interaction terms in logit and probit models;Economics Letters,2003
3. Obstacles to innovation – is there a need for consensus?,2020
4. Impediments to advanced technology adoption for Canadian manufacturers;Research Policy,2002
5. Organizational culture and innovation: a meta-analytic review;Journal of Product Innovation Management,2013
Cited by
4 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献