Multinationals, technology transfer and domestic R&D incentives

This thesis is a collection of four essays which aim to make a contribution to the theoretical analysis of the impact that flows of FDI have on fast growing developing countries, in which foreign firms not only invest but also set up R&D facilities. More precisely, we study these issues in a con...

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Main Author: Campos, Jaime F.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10951/
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author Campos, Jaime F.
author_facet Campos, Jaime F.
author_sort Campos, Jaime F.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This thesis is a collection of four essays which aim to make a contribution to the theoretical analysis of the impact that flows of FDI have on fast growing developing countries, in which foreign firms not only invest but also set up R&D facilities. More precisely, we study these issues in a context in which both the mode of foreign expansion and the incentives to innovate are endogenously determined. In particular, this thesis intends to contribute to answer the following key questions: 1. What is the impact that subsidiaries of Multinational Corporations (MNC) have on some of the key determinants for the host country technological development (e.g. Research and Development investment)? 2. What are the welfare implications of the different ways in which the MNC can serve the local economy (e.g. Exports, Subsidiary)? 3. What mechanisms can host countries implement to increase the benefits of the presence of MNC? Chapter 1 surveys the theoretical literature on the impact that the presence of MNC have on the host country economy, in particular on his technological development. This chapter identifies gaps in the theoretical literature that this thesis intends to fill up. Chapters 2, 3 and 4 develop theoretical models that analyse the strategic interaction between a MNC and a domestic firm. The analysis focuses on the effect of this interaction on the incentives that domestic firms have to undertake R&D investment. Also, we analyse the impact of the different scenarios on the domestic welfare and obtain implications on industrial policy. A common feature of these models is the utilisation of a game theoretic approach. We analyse multistage oligopoly models where firms choose simultaneously R&D investment and prices (or output) in the second and third stages, while in the first stage the foreign firm decide the mode of serving the domestic market: either by exporting or Foreign Direct Investment. Chapter 2 analyses these issues in the context of a vertically differentiated market, chapter 3 in the context of a horizontally differentiated product with R&D spillovers from the Multinational Corporation Subsidiary to the domestic firm. Finally, chapter 4 investigates research joint ventures in a duopoly market with R&D spillovers and the presence of a MNC's subsidiary.
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spelling nottingham-109512025-02-28T11:10:27Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10951/ Multinationals, technology transfer and domestic R&D incentives Campos, Jaime F. This thesis is a collection of four essays which aim to make a contribution to the theoretical analysis of the impact that flows of FDI have on fast growing developing countries, in which foreign firms not only invest but also set up R&D facilities. More precisely, we study these issues in a context in which both the mode of foreign expansion and the incentives to innovate are endogenously determined. In particular, this thesis intends to contribute to answer the following key questions: 1. What is the impact that subsidiaries of Multinational Corporations (MNC) have on some of the key determinants for the host country technological development (e.g. Research and Development investment)? 2. What are the welfare implications of the different ways in which the MNC can serve the local economy (e.g. Exports, Subsidiary)? 3. What mechanisms can host countries implement to increase the benefits of the presence of MNC? Chapter 1 surveys the theoretical literature on the impact that the presence of MNC have on the host country economy, in particular on his technological development. This chapter identifies gaps in the theoretical literature that this thesis intends to fill up. Chapters 2, 3 and 4 develop theoretical models that analyse the strategic interaction between a MNC and a domestic firm. The analysis focuses on the effect of this interaction on the incentives that domestic firms have to undertake R&D investment. Also, we analyse the impact of the different scenarios on the domestic welfare and obtain implications on industrial policy. A common feature of these models is the utilisation of a game theoretic approach. We analyse multistage oligopoly models where firms choose simultaneously R&D investment and prices (or output) in the second and third stages, while in the first stage the foreign firm decide the mode of serving the domestic market: either by exporting or Foreign Direct Investment. Chapter 2 analyses these issues in the context of a vertically differentiated market, chapter 3 in the context of a horizontally differentiated product with R&D spillovers from the Multinational Corporation Subsidiary to the domestic firm. Finally, chapter 4 investigates research joint ventures in a duopoly market with R&D spillovers and the presence of a MNC's subsidiary. 2007 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10951/1/486717.pdf Campos, Jaime F. (2007) Multinationals, technology transfer and domestic R&D incentives. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. International business enterprises Research and development projects
spellingShingle International business enterprises
Research and development projects
Campos, Jaime F.
Multinationals, technology transfer and domestic R&D incentives
title Multinationals, technology transfer and domestic R&D incentives
title_full Multinationals, technology transfer and domestic R&D incentives
title_fullStr Multinationals, technology transfer and domestic R&D incentives
title_full_unstemmed Multinationals, technology transfer and domestic R&D incentives
title_short Multinationals, technology transfer and domestic R&D incentives
title_sort multinationals, technology transfer and domestic r&d incentives
topic International business enterprises
Research and development projects
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10951/