The Influence of Federal Laboratory R&D on Industrial Research

43 Pages Posted: 21 May 2000 Last revised: 26 Oct 2022

See all articles by James D. Adams

James D. Adams

Dept of Economics, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)

Eric P. Chiang

University of Florida - Warrington College of Business Administration - Department of Economics

Jeff Jensen

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland; University of Nevada, Las Vegas - College of Business - Department of Economics

Date Written: March 2000

Abstract

Over the past 60 years the United States has created the world's largest system of government laboratories. The impact of the laboratories on the private economy has been little studied though their research accounts for 14% of total U.S. R&D, more than the R&D of all colleges and universities combined. In this paper we study the influence of federal laboratory R&D on industrial research using a sample of industrial laboratories. In head-to-head comparisons with alternative measures, we find that Cooperative Research and Development Agreements or CRADAs, are the primary channel by which federal laboratories increase the patenting and R&D of industrial laboratories. With a CRADA industrial laboratories patent more, spend more on company-financed R&D and spend more of their own money on federal laboratories. Without a CRADA patenting stays about the same and only federally funded R&D increases, mostly because of direct subsidies by government. These results are consistent with the literature on endogenous R&D spillovers, which emphasizes that knowledge spills over when recipients work at making it spill over. CRADAs are legal agreements between federal laboratories and firms to work together on joint research. They are backed by real budgets and accompanied by cost sharing that could bind the parties together in joint research. Moreover, the CRADA instrument is the main form of such agreements. Thus, both in theory and in fact CRADAs may be more beneficial to firms than other public- private interactions, precisely because of the mutual effort that they require of firms and government laboratories.

Suggested Citation

Adams, James D. and Chiang, Eric P. and Jensen, Jeff, The Influence of Federal Laboratory R&D on Industrial Research (March 2000). NBER Working Paper No. w7612, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=228086

James D. Adams (Contact Author)

Dept of Economics, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute ( email )

110 8th St
3504 Russell Sage Laboratory
Troy, NY 12180-3590
United States
518-276-2523 (Phone)
518-276-2235 (Fax)

National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) ( email )

1050 Massachusetts Avenue
Cambridge, MA 02138
United States
352-392-0124 (Phone)
352-392-7860 (Fax)

Eric P. Chiang

University of Florida - Warrington College of Business Administration - Department of Economics

Gainesville, FL 32611-7140
United States

Jeff Jensen

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

East 6th & Superior
Cleveland, OH 44101-1387
United States

University of Nevada, Las Vegas - College of Business - Department of Economics

4505 S. Maryland Parkway
Las Vegas, NV 89154
United States

Do you have negative results from your research you’d like to share?

Paper statistics

Downloads
61
Abstract Views
2,882
Rank
638,193
PlumX Metrics