SC247    Topics     Supply Chain    Other    ITIF

The Acquisition and Commercialization of Invention in American Manufacturing: Incidence and Impact

This paper reports on a recent survey of over 6000 American manufacturing and service sector firms on the extent to which innovators rely upon external sources of invention.

Recent accounts suggest the development and commercialization of invention has become more “open.” Greater division of labor between inventors and innovators can enhance social welfare through gains from trade and greater economies of specialization.

Moreover, this extensive reliance upon outside sources for invention also suggests that understanding the factors that condition the extramural supply of inventions to innovators is crucial to understanding the determinants of the rate and direction of innovative activity.

This paper reports on a recent survey of over 6000 American manufacturing and service sector firms on the extent to which innovators rely upon external sources of invention.

Our results indicate that, between 2007 and 2009, 18% of manufacturing firms had innovated – meaning had introduced a product that was new to the market.

Of these, 49% report that their most important new product had originated from an outside source, notably customers, suppliers and technology specialists.

We also estimate the contribution of each source to innovation in the US economy. Although customers are the most frequent outside source, inventions acquired from customers tend to be economically less significant than those from technology specialists.

As a group, external sources of invention make a significant contribution to the overall rate of innovation in the economy. Indeed, results from a multinomial logit model suggest that, were the outside availability of innovation to be removed, the percentage of innovating firms in the U.S. manufacturing sector would drop from 18% to 10%.

NBER Working Paper No. 20264 - Issued in June 2014 - NBER Program(s): PR


Log in to download this paper.
Remember me.
Forgot your password? · Not a member? Register today!

What’s Related

News
Stop Talking About US Manufacturing Jobs Coming Back, Because They’re Not!
A plea to presidential candidates: stop talking about bringing manufacturing jobs back from China, in fact, talk a lot less about manufacturing, period.
U.S. Manufacturing Still At a Two-Year Low
Is U.S. Manufacturing In a Technical Recession?
Why Americans Are So Nostalgic About The Manufacturing Industry
The Myth of America’s Manufacturing Renaissance
More News
Resources
The Myth of America’s Manufacturing Renaissance: The Real State of U.S. Manufacturing
The debate on U.S. manufacturing should not be informed by anecdotal evidence, promotional consulting reports, or reports from think tanks with an agenda of keeping bad news from d...
The Acquisition and Commercialization of Invention in American Manufacturing: Incidence and Impact
This paper reports on a recent survey of over 6000 American manufacturing and service sector firms on the extent to which innovators rely upon external sources of invention.
More Resources