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Article Dans Une Revue Research Policy Année : 2016

Additionality or crowding-out ? An overall evaluation of public R&D subsidy on private R&D expenditure

Résumé

This study analyzes the effect of public R&D subsidies on private R&D expenditure in a sample of French firms during the period 1993–2009. We evaluate whether there is any input additionality of public R&D subsidies by distinguishing between R&D tax credit recipient and non-recipient firms. In addition, combining difference-in-differences with propensity score and exact (both simple and categorical) matching methods, we assess the effect of R&D subsidies between treated (subsidy recipients) and controls (subsidy non-recipients) as well as between differently treated (small, medium and large subsidy recipient) firms. Furthermore, we implement a dose–response matching approach to determine the optimality of public R&D subsidy provisions. We find evidence of either no additionality or substitution effects between public and private R&D expenditure. Crowding-out effects appear to be more pronounced for medium-high levels of public subsidies, and generally under the R&D tax credit regime. A number of robustness checks corroborate our main findings.

Dates et versions

hal-01507979 , version 1 (13-04-2017)

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Citer

Marianna Marino, Stéphane Lhuillery, Pierpaolo Parrotta, Davide Sala. Additionality or crowding-out ? An overall evaluation of public R&D subsidy on private R&D expenditure. Research Policy, 2016, 45 (9), pp.1715-1730. ⟨10.1016/j.respol.2016.04.009⟩. ⟨hal-01507979⟩
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