Employment Effects of Innovation at the Firm Level

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Employment Effects of Innovation at the Firm Level. Stefan Lachenmaier * , Horst Rottmann ♦. 3. Konferenz für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsdaten, Mai 2006, Wiesbaden. * Ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich ♦ University of Applied Sciences Amberg-Weiden and Ifo Institute. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Employment Effects of Innovation at the Firm Level

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Employment Effects of Innovation at the Firm Level

Stefan Lachenmaier*, Horst Rottmann♦

* Ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich♦ University of Applied Sciences Amberg-Weiden and Ifo Institute

3. Konferenz für Sozial- und Wirtschaftsdaten, Mai 2006, Wiesbaden

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

The Research Question

• Do innovations have a significant effect on employment?

• Concentrate on the analysis of long-term effects

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Motivation

• Theoretical contributions show different results– Product innovations: increase demand

increase employment level decrease competition increase market power reduce output decrease employment

– Process innovations: increase labour productivity decrease employment level lower costs lower prices higher demand stimulate emplyoment

Overall effect is depending on elasticity of demand

• Empirical evidence is necessary• Panel studies are rare due to the lack of appropriate data

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Main Idea

• Exploit long innovation panel data set

• Distinguish between product and process innovations

• Introduce different innovation categories

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Related Literature

• Theoretical Contributions:– Petit (1995)– Stoneman (1984), Hamermesh (1993)

• Empirical Contributions:– Chennels / Van Reenen (1999)– Cross-Sectional Analyses: Zimmermann (1991), König et al.

(1995)– Employment Growth Analyses: Brouwer et al. (1993),

Blanchflower/ Burgess (1999), Blechinger et al. (1998)– Panel Analyses: Smolny (1998), van Reenen (1997),

Rottmann/Ruschinski (1998)

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Database

• Ifo Innovation Survey• Panel Structure: 1982-2003 (unbalanced)• German Manufacturing Sector• ~1300 observations per year• Contains information on:

– Innovation: Product and Process Innovation, Innovations introduced, Innovation expenditure

– Firm characteristics: firm size, NACE, German states, turnover

• Control variables added on sector level (2digit NACE)

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Empirical Model

• Modelling employment adjustment process is complex, esp. for small firms (e.g. Hamermesh / Pfann 1996)

• Labour demand reacts slowly to changes in innovation behaviour

• Estimating long-term effects: Following Blanchard / Wolfers (2000), Nickell (1997, 2003)

– Calculating averages for 4-(and 5-year periods)

– Use period averages for panel analysis (time index t indicates period)

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Estimation

),,( XQTfL

L: Labour demand T: TechnologyQ: Product quality X: Controls

Level Equation:

Linear Equation in differenced log values:

3210 xqtl

- transformed into growth rates

- allows to introduce innovation variables

- Eliminates unobservable firm effect

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

itititititPd

itPc

it uegwIIl 543210

w: Growth of Real Hourly Wage Rate (sectoral)g: Growth of Real Gross Value Added (sectoral)eit: log of employment start level

Estimation Equation:

Pc: Process Innovation (proxy for t) Pd: Product Innovation (proxy for q)

Remember:

-Variables are expressed in averages over periods

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

The problem of endogeneity

• Potential contemporaneous correlation of innovation and error term resulting from a shock simultaneously affecting employment and innovation

• IV Strategy– So far we tested Innovation Impulses, Innovation Obstacles,

lagged values– No robust results: Either instruments are not good (low

significance in first stage) or not valid (Sargan test)

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Descriptive Statistics

Until 1990: Former West Germany, since 1991: GermanyUnbalanced panel: 9142 „observations“, 4567 different firms, 5 time categories

Descriptive Statistics Mean Std. Dev. Min MaxEmpoloyment Growth (log) -0.016 0.261 -2.708 2.996Innovation 0.497 0 1 Product Innovation 0.406 0 1 Process Innovation 0.317 0 1Employment Start Level (log) 4.682 1.506 0 11.513Sectoral GVA Growth 0.005 0.046 -0.265 0.283Sectoral Real Wage Growth 0.018 0.026 -0.231 0.428

n=9142, N=4567

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Regressions I

Dependent Variable: Average Yearly Employment Growth(1) (2) (3)

Estimated OLS standard Heteroskedasticity Covariance robustCoefficients errors robust s.e. standard errors

Employment Start Level -0.034 (0.002)*** (0.003)*** (0.003)***Real Wage Growth -0.437 (0.132)*** (0.162)*** (0.161)***Real GVA Growth 0.257 (0.081)*** (0.102)** (0.102)**Product Innovation 0.033 (0.008)*** (0.009)*** (0.009)***Process Innovation 0.057 (0.009)*** (0.009)*** (0.009)***Year incl.Sector incl.States incl.Constant 0.112 (0.026)*** (0.024)*** (0.026)***Observations 9142Adj. R-squared 0.039Standard errors in parentheses* significant at 10%; ** significant at 5%; *** significant at 1%

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Regressions II

Dependent Variable: Average Yearly Employment Growth

Employment Start Level -0.039*** (0.004) -0.034*** (0.004) -0.060*** (0.008)Real Wage Growth -0.500** (0.220) -0.572** (0.255) -0.471 (0.433)Real GVA Growth 0.282** (0.124) 0.341** (0.137) 0.134 (0.244)Product Innovation 0.053*** (0.012) 0.049*** (0.014) 0.066*** (0.024)Process Innovation 0.052*** (0.013) 0.062*** (0.014) 0.036 (0.028)Year incl. incl. incl.Sector incl. incl. incl.States incl. incl. incl.Constant 0.099** (0.039) 0.076* (0.039) 0.200*** (0.048)Observations 5485 4136 1349Adj. R-squared 0.038 0.031 0.087Robust standard errors in parentheses

* significant at 10%; ** significant at 5%; *** significant at 1%

1991-2003 West 1991-2003 East 1991-2003(4) (5) (6)

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Regressions III

Dependent Variable: Average Yearly Employment Growth

Employment Start Level -0.044*** (0.005) -0.025*** (0.006)Real Wage Growth -0.498** (0.215) -0.399 (0.250)Real GVA Growth 0.157 (0.145) 0.405*** (0.140)Product Innovation 0.044*** (0.012) 0.018 (0.013)Process Innovation 0.064*** (0.012) 0.044*** (0.013)Year incl. incl.Sector incl. incl.States incl. incl.Constant 0.142*** (0.030) 0.067 (0.060)Observations 6062 3080Adj. R-squared 0.035 0.031Robust standard errors in parentheses

* significant at 10%; ** significant at 5%; *** significant at 1%

less than 200 employees

equal or more than 200 employees

(7) (8)

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Regressions IVDependent Variable: Average Yearly Employment Growth

Employment Start Level -0.034*** (0.003) -0.035*** (0.003)Real Wage Growth -0.439*** (0.161) -0.444*** (0.162)Real GVA Growth 0.260** (0.102) 0.256** (0.102)Innovation 0.063*** (0.014) ---Innovation (R&D) -0.007 (0.014) ---Innovation (Patents) 0.026** (0.011) ---Product Innovation --- 0.044*** (0.017)Process Innovation --- 0.050*** (0.013)Product Innovation (R&D) --- -0.027* (0.016)Process Innovation (R&D) --- 0.006 (0.014)Product Innovation (Patents) --- 0.026** (0.012)Process Innovation (Patents) --- 0.031 (0.025)Year incl. incl.Sector incl. incl.States incl. incl.Constant 0.107*** (0.026) 0.119*** (0.026)Observations 9140 9096Adj. R-squared 0.038 0.039Robust standard errors in parentheses

* significant at 10%; ** significant at 5%; *** significant at 1%

(9) (10)

ifo Institute for Economic Research at the University of Munich

Summary

• Innovations show positive effects on employment growth• True for product as well as process innovations. Process

innovations show even higher effect• No additional effect for R&D based innovations• Additional effect for product innovations which involved

patent applications• Further Research: Dynamics of adjustment process