R&D Partnerships and Innovation Performance: Can There Be Too Much of a Good Thing?

35 Pages Posted: 27 Jan 2015

See all articles by Hanna Hottenrott

Hanna Hottenrott

Technische Universität München (TUM)

Cindy Lopes Bento

KU Leuven - Department of Managerial Economics, Strategy, and Innovation

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Date Written: July 15, 2014

Abstract

R&D collaboration facilitates pooling of complementary skills, learning from the partner as well as sharing risks and costs. Research therefore repeatedly stressed the positive relationship between collaborative R&D and innovation performance. Fewer studies addressed potential drawbacks of collaborative R&D. Collaborative R&D comes at the costs of coordination and monitoring, requires knowledge disclosure and involves the risk of opportunistic behaviour by the partners. Thus, while the net gains from collaboration can be high initially, cost may start to outweigh those benefits if firms engage in multiple collaborative projects simultaneously. This study explicitly considers a firm’s collaboration intensity, that is, the share of collaborative R&D projects in the firms’ total R&D project portfolio. For a sample of 2,891 firms located in Germany, active in abroad range of manufacturing and service sectors and of which 86% are SMEs, we indeed find that increasing the share of collaborative R&D projects in total R&D projects is associated with a higher probability of product innovation and with a higher market success of new products. While we can confirm previous findings in terms of gains for innovation performance, we also find that collaboration has decreasing and even negative returns on product innovation if its intensity increases above a certain threshold. Consequently, the relationship between collaboration intensity and innovation has an inverted-U shape. In particular, costs start outweighing benefits if a firm pursues more than about two thirds of its R&D projects in collaboration. This result is robust to conditioning market success to the introduction of new products and to accounting for the selection into collaborating.

Keywords: Innovation performance, product innovation, R&D partnerships, collaboration intensity, SMEs, transaction costs, selection model, endogenous switching

JEL Classification: O31, O32, O33, O34

Suggested Citation

Hottenrott, Hanna and Lopes Bento, Cindy, R&D Partnerships and Innovation Performance: Can There Be Too Much of a Good Thing? (July 15, 2014). ZEW - Centre for European Economic Research Discussion Paper No. 14-108, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2555476 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2555476

Hanna Hottenrott (Contact Author)

Technische Universität München (TUM) ( email )

Arcisstrasse 21
Munich, DE 80333
Germany

Cindy Lopes Bento

KU Leuven - Department of Managerial Economics, Strategy, and Innovation ( email )

Naamsestraat 69 bus 3500
Leuven, 3000
Belgium

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

Paper statistics

Downloads
69
Abstract Views
883
Rank
310,608
PlumX Metrics