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Cooperating and Non-cooperating Firms in Inventive and Absorptive Research

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Abstract

We consider a duopoly competing in quantity, where firms can invest in both innovative and absorptive research and development to reduce their unit production cost, and where they benefit from free spillovers between them. We analyze the case where firms act non-cooperatively and the case where they cooperate by forming a research joint venture. We show that, in both modes of play, there exists a unique symmetric solution. We find that the level of investment in innovative research and development is always the highest and that the efficiency of investment in absorptive research has almost no impact on the equilibrium solution.

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Notes

  1. We exclude zero as a lower bound because the characterization of the solutions was made under the assumption that l>0.

  2. Actually, we compared the results obtained with values of A as high as 50 times the lowest value (similarly for D), and the conclusions remain qualitatively the same.

  3. The exact threshold where investments are the same is around 0.5 but depends on other parameter values.

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Acknowledgements

Research supported by NSERC, Canada, and HEC Montréal. We wish to thank the four anonymous reviewers and Gustav Feichtinger for valuable comments on a previous draft. The usual disclaimer applies.

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Correspondence to Georges Zaccour.

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Ben Youssef, S., Breton, M. & Zaccour, G. Cooperating and Non-cooperating Firms in Inventive and Absorptive Research. J Optim Theory Appl 157, 229–251 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10957-012-0156-9

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