Research Interests

Applied microeconomics, innovation, urban economics, industrial organization

Job Market Paper

The Location of Industrial Innovation: Does Manufacturing Matter?
Paper

Abstract: What explains the location of industrial innovation? Economists have traditionally attempted to answer this question by studying firm-external knowledge spillovers. This paper shows that firm-internal linkages between production and R&D play an equally important role. I estimate an R&D location choice model that predicts patents by a firm in a location from R&D productivity and costs. Focusing on large R&D-performing firms in the chemical industry, an average-sized plant raises the firm’s R&D productivity in the metropolitan area by about 2.5 times. The elasticity of R&D productivity with respect to the firm’s production workers is almost as large as the elasticity with respect to total patents in the MSA, while proximity to academic R&D has no significant effect on R&D productivity in this sample. Other manufacturing industries exhibit similar results. My results cast doubt on the frequently-held view that a country can divest itself of manufacturing and specialize in innovation alone.

  • Curriculum Vitae

    Contact
    Brown University
    Department of Economics
    Box B
    Providence, RI 02912, USA
    Isabel_Tecu(at)brown.edu

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