The Risks of Innovation : Are Innovating Firms Less Likely to Die?
While innovation matters for competitiveness it may expose firms to survival risks. Using plant-product data for Chile and discrete-time hazard models we show that innovating plants have a lower hazard of exit. However, risk impacts strongly on the innovation-exit relationship: only innovators that retain diversified sources of revenue or face lower market risk are less likely to die. Single-product innovators are at greater risk of exiting. Exposure to technical risk does not affect exit probabilities differentially. We provide tentative evidence that single-product innovators have higher profits which helps to rationalize their innovation decision despite the increased risk of exit.
Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Journal Article biblioteca |
Language: | en_US |
Published: |
MIT Press
2014-03-21
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Subjects: | firm exit, firm survival, product innovation, multi-product firms, |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21485 |
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Summary: | While innovation matters for competitiveness it may expose firms to survival risks. Using plant-product data for Chile and discrete-time hazard models we show that innovating plants have a lower hazard of exit. However, risk impacts strongly on the innovation-exit relationship: only innovators that retain diversified sources of revenue or face lower market risk are less likely to die. Single-product innovators are at greater risk of exiting. Exposure to technical risk does not affect exit probabilities differentially. We provide tentative evidence that single-product innovators have higher profits which helps to rationalize their innovation decision despite the increased risk of exit. |
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