On the measurement of real R&D: Divisia price indices for UK business enterprise R&D
This paper argues that, to measure the quantity of R&D undertaken, it is necessary to deflate R&D spending by a measure of its cost. Based on Divisia weighted averages of proxy price series, price indices are constructed for R&D spending in UK manufacturing in eight sectors and as a whole for 1970–1992. These indices are a better guide to the cost of performing R&D than the GDP deflator, which overstates the rise in real business enterprise R&D in the 1980s, although year-on-year changes are less distorted. Divisia indices are theoretically and empirically better at capturing changes in the cost of R&D than are fixed weighted indices. An investigation of the rapidly rising level of pharmaceutical R&D in the UK concludes that the rise is genuine in that it has not been driven by rapid increases in research salaries. Copyright , Beech Tree Publishing.
Year of publication: |
1996
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Authors: | Cameron, Gavin |
Published in: |
Research Evaluation. - Oxford University Press, ISSN 0958-2029. - Vol. 6.1996, 3, p. 215-219
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Publisher: |
Oxford University Press |
Saved in:
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