Abstract
Using recent data drawn from the European Working Conditions Survey for 32 European countries, we explore the relationship between two indicators of knowledge diffusion processes —country-level R&D and individual-level ICT usage at work by entrepreneurs—, Intellectual Property Rights (IPR), and individual-level entrepreneurial performance as measured by earnings. Our results show that country-level expenditures on R&D, entrepreneurs’ ICT use frequency at work, and IPR are all positively associated with earnings (and hence the quality) of individual entrepreneurs. However, we also find two intriguing moderation effects in the sense that IPR reduces both the positive relationship between country R&D and entrepreneurial earnings and the positive relationship between ICT usage and earnings. This suggests that too strict IPR legislation may hamper the diffusion of knowledge created by R&D, as well as limit the facilitating role of ICT usage in the exploitation of knowledge spillovers. Hence, governments need to carefully consider the level of IPR they want to install.
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Notes
- 1.
For a more extensive discussion on innovation and R&D policy in Europe, we refer to Van Stel et al. (2019).
- 2.
This figure varies substantially across European countries and is correlated with the level of economic development of the country’s economy. Thus, this figure rises above 2.5% in countries like Sweden, Austria, Germany, Denmark, and Finland. By contrast, this figure lies below 1% in countries such as Poland, Turkey, and Slovakia, Romania and Latvia (OECD 2019). This large cross-country variation can also be observed in Table 8.1.
- 3.
See Table 8.1
- 4.
Note that the present chapter focuses on high-income (i.e. European) countries.
- 5.
This Foundation is an autonomous body of the European Union (EU), created to assist in the formulation of future policy on social and work-related matters. Further information can be found at www.eurofound.europa.eu
- 6.
This set includes the EU-28 together with 5 candidate countries (Albania, the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Turkey) and 2 EFTA countries (Norway and Switzerland).
- 7.
The interviewer is asked to explain, if necessary, that net monthly earnings are the earnings at one’s disposal after taxes and social security contributions.
- 8.
PPS is the technical term used by Eurostat for the common (artificial) currency in which national accounts aggregates are expressed when adjusted for price level differences using PPPs. Thus, PPPs can be interpreted as the exchange rate of the PPS against the €.
- 9.
The WEF-EOS draws on the views of over 14,000 executives in over 140 economies and captures valuable information on a broad range of factors that are critical for a country’s competitiveness and sustainable development, and for which data sources are scarce or, frequently, non-existent on a global scale. Among several examples of otherwise unavailable data are the quality of the educational system, indicators measuring business sophistication, and labor market variables such as flexibility in wage determination. The Survey results are used in the calculation of the Global Competitiveness Index (GCI) and other indexes of the WEF. Further information about WEF can be found at https://www.weforum.org. Further information about the GCI can be found at https://www.weforum.org/reports/the-global-competitiveness-report-2017-2018
- 10.
Results concerning the situation when the IPP indicator is above 4.62 can be achieved by adding marginal effects associated with GERD and the interaction term in Model 3 (i.e. 6.83–3.54).
- 11.
Results concerning the situation when the IPP indicator is above 4.62 can be achieved by adding marginal effects associated with ICT use and the interaction term in Model 3 (i.e. 2.58–2.57).
- 12.
Further information about the EFW index can be found at https://www.fraserinstitute.org/economic-freedom/approach. Further information about the Fraser Institute can be found at https://www.fraserinstitute.org
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Acknowledgments
All authors contributed equally to the manuscript. The authors would like to thank Andrew Burke and the book editors —Maribel Guerrero and David Urbano— for their insightful comments that contributed substantially to the development of this chapter. The current chapter is an extension of Van Stel et al. (2019), which is part of Serhiy Lyalkov’s doctoral dissertation (written in the framework of the Ph.D. Program in Economics, Business, Finance and Computer Science at the University of Huelva and the International University of Andalusia, Spain). The role of ICT use frequency at work by entrepreneurs in relation to IPR and entrepreneurial performance is the main novel element relative to the original publication. At the time of writing, Ana Millán was lecturer at the Department of Financial Economics and Accounting, Pablo de Olavide University, Sevilla, Spain. This work was supported by the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad) under research projects ECO2017-86305-C4-2-R and ECO2017-86402-C2-2-R; the Ministry of Economy and Knowledge of the Andalusian Regional Government (Junta de Andalucía-Consejería de Economía y Conocimiento) through Research Group SEJ-487 (Spanish Entrepreneurship Research Group – SERG), and Andalusia ERDF 2014–20 Operational Programme (Programa Operativo FEDER Andalucía 2014–20) under University of Huelva research project UHU-1265299; and University of Huelva through Research and Transfer Policy Strategies (Estrategias de Política de Investigación y Transferencia).
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van Stel, A., Barrientos-Marín, J., Lyalkov, S., Millán, A., Millán, J.M. (2021). How IPR Can Shape Knowledge Diffusion Processes in Europe. In: Guerrero, M., Urbano, D. (eds) Technology Transfer and Entrepreneurial Innovations. International Studies in Entrepreneurship, vol 51. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-70022-5_8
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