165 research outputs found
Analysis of firm structures and outsourcing in Great Britain
This project provides empirical evidence on firms' demographic characteristics and the extent of specialisation and vertical integration of British firms across industries
Geographic proximity and firm-university innovation linkages: evidence from Great Britain
We investigate evidence for spatially mediated knowledge transfer from university research. We examine whether firms locate their R&D labs near universities, and whether those that do are more likely to co-operate with, or source knowledge from universities. We find that pharmaceutical firms locate R&D near to frontier chemistry research departments, consistent with accessing localised knowledge spillovers, but also linked to the presence of science parks. In industries such as chemicals and vehicles there is
less evidence of immediate co-location, but those innovative firms that do locate near to relevant research departments are more likely to engage with universities
ICT, corporate restructuring and productivity
Stronger productivity growth in the US than the EU over the late 1990s is widely attributed to faster, more widespread adoption of information and communication technology (ICT). The literature has emphasised complementarities in production between ICT and internal restructuring as an important mechanism. We investigate the idea that increased use of ICT has facilitated outsourcing of business services, and that these are complementary activities in production because they allow firms to focus on their core competencies. This is consistent with evidence from the business literature and aggregate trends, and we show evidence from microdata that is consistent with this idea
Outsourcing and offshoring of business services: how important is ICT?
This paper considers the impact that information and communication technology (ICT) has on firms' choices over organisational form. In particular, the decision over whether to produce in-house or outsource services, and the decision over the location of activity. ICT reduces the transaction and adjustment costs of moving activity outside the firm, and of carrying it out at greater geographic distance. We find that more ICT-intensive firms purchase a greater amount of services on the market and they are more likely to purchase offshore than less ICT-intensive firms
Increasing innovative activity in the UK? Where now for government support for innovation and technology transfer?
In this Briefing Note, we present new evidence on the UKâs innovative performance and provide a summary of government business support programmes aimed at fostering innovative activity and technology transfer. Following recent reviews of policy in this area, there remain a number of such schemes in operation. We discuss the rationales for each, including the extent to which they overlap, and suggest some ways in which evidence on take-up and on effectiveness might be used to guide any future policy changes in this area
Productivity policy
In this Briefing Note, we first present internationally comparative evidence on the UK's productivity performance (Section 2) and some of the underlying "drivers" of productivity identified by the government (Section 3). We then provide an overview of productivity policy under both Labour governments since 1997, and discuss the recent direction of policy in this 2005 Election Briefing area (Section 4). Finally, we discuss the proposals of the three main parties in the area of productivity policy (Section 5)
Duality symmetry of BFKL equation: reggeized gluons vs color dipoles
We show that the duality symmetry of the BFKL equation can be interpreted as
a symmetry under rotation of the BFKL Kernel in the transverse space from
s-channel (color dipole model) to t-channel (reggeized gluon formulation). We
argue that the duality symmetry holds also in the non-forward case due to a
very special structure of the non-forward BFKL Kernel, which can be written as
a sum of three forward BFKL Kernels. The duality symmetry is established by
identifying the dual coordinates with the transverse coordinates of a
non-diagonal dipole scattered off the target.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure
The location of innovative activity in Europe
In this paper we use new data to describe how firms from 15 European countries organise their innovative activities. The data matches firm level accounting data with information on the patents that those firms and their subsidiaries have applied for at the European Patents Office. We describe the data in detail
Understanding co-operative R&D activity: evidence from four European countries
This paper investigates co-operative research activity by firms using data from
the 3rd Community Innovation Survey for four countries, France, Germany, Spain and the
UK. We build on the Cassiman and Veugelers (CV) (2002) study of Belgian manufacturing
firms, by incorporating information on the service sector, and considering the role of public
support in affecting firmsâ decisions to co-operate. Our results support those in CV, in that
we find a positive relationship between the likelihood of undertaking co-operative R&D
and both incoming knowledge spillovers and the extent to which firms find strategic
methods important in appropriating the returns to innovative activity. We find that public
support is positively related to the probability of undertaking co-operative agreements
particularly with regard to the likelihood of co-operation with the research base. We find
some evidence, in particular for Spain, that firms carry out co-operative R&D to overcome
excessive perceived risks and financial constraints
- âŠ