Affiliation:
1. South Champagne Business School, Y Schools Troyes France
2. Department of Business Administration IQRA University Karachi Pakistan
3. Institut de Recherche en Gestion Université Paris‐Est‐Créteil Creteil France
4. Faculty of Business and Management Muscat University Muscat Oman
5. Department of Management University of Bologna Bologna Italy
6. Montpellier Business School Montpellier France
Abstract
AbstractThis paper examines the effect of peers on a firm's research and development (R&D) policy. We show that firms do not make R&D decisions in isolation, and that industry dynamics play an important role in defining a firm's R&D intensity. Using a large sample of 54,393 firm‐year observations from 1991 to 2015 in the United States, we find that firms' R&D decisions are mainly driven by their industry peers' R&D policies. Moreover, we find that R&D mimicking is significant only in the presence of strong product market competition, whereas we do not find any evidence of information‐based herding in R&D investments. Our additional analysis shows that our main conclusions remain valid even in the presence of financial constraints, and regardless of the firms' market positions. Finally, we provide evidence that R&D mimicking increases firms' future values, future patent outputs, and estimated patent dollar values. Our findings are robust to endogeneity concerns, and to using alternative sample compositions, R&D intensity proxies, and different industry classifications.
Subject
Finance,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous),Accounting
Cited by
5 articles.
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