The impact of new goods and service products on firm growth: evidence from Austrian-linked firm-level data
Using a matched innovation survey and structural business statistics, we investigate the impact of the introduction of new service products and other types of technological innovations on firm growth measured as subsequent two-year employment growth. Results, based on median and robust regression methods for manufacturing firms, show that, on average, both the introduction of new goods and process innovations have a significant and positive impact on subsequent firm growth. In contrast, the introduction of new services does not, on average, have a significant impact on firm growth for both manufacturing and service firms. However, quantile regressions show that the introduction of new service products has a significant and positive impact on firm growth for high-growth service firms. Finally, in manufacturing, the introduction of product innovations has a positive impact on firm growth at both the lower and higher ends of distribution (i.e. for both high-growth and shrinking firms).
Year of publication: |
2014
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Authors: | Falk, Martin |
Published in: |
Economics of Innovation and New Technology. - Taylor & Francis Journals, ISSN 1043-8599. - Vol. 23.2014, 4, p. 378-397
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Publisher: |
Taylor & Francis Journals |
Saved in:
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