Drawing on the knowledge - based view of the firm, we investigate whether firm performance is related to the accumulated stock of technological knowledge associated with the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR), and wh at contextual factors affect this relationship. We test our research questions on a longitudinal matched patent - firm data set on large firms filing 4IR patents at the European Patent Office ( EPO ) . Our results , which control for a large number of patent - and firm - level variables as well as firm fixed unobserved heterogeneity, show a significant and economically relevant positive association between the development of 4IR technologies and firm productivity . However, no significant relationship with firm profitability is detected , thereby su ggesting that the returns from 4IR technological development s are slow to cash in. We also find that late innovators benefit more from the development of 4IR technological capabilities than early innovators and experience a substantial “boost effect” . We provide empirical support to an explanation of th ese finding s in terms of the ability of late innovators to (i) manage the inherent complexity of the bundle of technologies comprising the 4IR and (ii) exploit profitable downstream applications of the 4IR.
Going Revolutionary: The Impact of 4IR Technology Development on Firm Performance / Benassi, Mario; Grinza, Elena; Rentocchini, Francesco; Rondi, Laura (SPRU WORKING PAPER SERIES). - In: SPRU Working Paper Series - ISSN 2057-6668, Working paper no. 2020-08[s.l] : Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU), University of Sussex, 2020.
Going Revolutionary: The Impact of 4IR Technology Development on Firm Performance
Grinza, Elena;Rondi, Laura
2020
Abstract
Drawing on the knowledge - based view of the firm, we investigate whether firm performance is related to the accumulated stock of technological knowledge associated with the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR), and wh at contextual factors affect this relationship. We test our research questions on a longitudinal matched patent - firm data set on large firms filing 4IR patents at the European Patent Office ( EPO ) . Our results , which control for a large number of patent - and firm - level variables as well as firm fixed unobserved heterogeneity, show a significant and economically relevant positive association between the development of 4IR technologies and firm productivity . However, no significant relationship with firm profitability is detected , thereby su ggesting that the returns from 4IR technological development s are slow to cash in. We also find that late innovators benefit more from the development of 4IR technological capabilities than early innovators and experience a substantial “boost effect” . We provide empirical support to an explanation of th ese finding s in terms of the ability of late innovators to (i) manage the inherent complexity of the bundle of technologies comprising the 4IR and (ii) exploit profitable downstream applications of the 4IR.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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https://hdl.handle.net/11583/2820292