The Impact of Public R&D Expenditure on Private R&D Expenditure: The Evidence of Regions of EU Less Developed Countries

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dc.contributor.author Zdražil Pavel
dc.date.accessioned 2016-11-14T08:20:06Z
dc.date.available 2016-11-14T08:20:06Z
dc.date.issued 2015
dc.identifier.isbn 978-80-7494-225-9 eng
dc.identifier.issn
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10195/66566
dc.description.abstract One of the never-ending discussions in economics is connected to government policies and interventions for development in various domains of human society. The topic of science, research and innovation in a global economy belongs to one of them. There are many studies that analysed impacts of public R&D on private R&D among countries but for the regional level they are missing. The aim of this paper is to examine the influence of public R&D expenditure on private R&D expenditure of the regions of EU less developed countries. This aim has been achieved by correlation analysis, and reviewing relations of development of examined volumes. The results have been discussed with some relevant studies in the field of public R&D expenditure impacts on private R&D investment. Based on our findings, we can suggest that there is no common pattern for public R&D influences on private R&D among the regions of EU less developed countries. Furthermore, there are no basic differences between the direct and indirect (i.e. via universities and public institutes) R&D funding for government. We can suggest beyond, it could be even better for government to looking for another effective ways of increasing private R&D, since the changes of private sources which may follow public funding are lesser, then one can expect. At least we can say that public sources are causing crowding out effect of private R&D investment, not the crowding in, which is undesirable; therefore, interventions connected only to increasing funding are simply not part of what regional or central governments may aim at all. eng
dc.format p. 218-228 eng
dc.language.iso eng
dc.publisher Technická univerzita v Liberci eng
dc.relation.ispartof Proceedings of the 12th International Conference Liberec Economics Forum eng
dc.rights Pouze v rámci univerzity eng
dc.subject R&D expenditure eng
dc.subject sectors by performance eng
dc.subject EU regions eng
dc.subject less developed countries eng
dc.subject R&D expenditure cze
dc.subject sectors by performance cze
dc.subject EU regions cze
dc.subject less developed countries cze
dc.title The Impact of Public R&D Expenditure on Private R&D Expenditure: The Evidence of Regions of EU Less Developed Countries eng
dc.title.alternative The Impact of Public R&D Expenditure on Private R&D Expenditure: The Evidence of Regions of EU Less Developed Countries cze
dc.type ConferenceObject eng
dc.description.abstract-translated One of the never-ending discussions in economics is connected to government policies and interventions for development in various domains of human society. The topic of science, research and innovation in a global economy belongs to one of them. There are many studies that analysed impacts of public R&D on private R&D among countries but for the regional level they are missing. The aim of this paper is to examine the influence of public R&D expenditure on private R&D expenditure of the regions of EU less developed countries. This aim has been achieved by correlation analysis, and reviewing relations of development of examined volumes. The results have been discussed with some relevant studies in the field of public R&D expenditure impacts on private R&D investment. Based on our findings, we can suggest that there is no common pattern for public R&D influences on private R&D among the regions of EU less developed countries. Furthermore, there are no basic differences between the direct and indirect (i.e. via universities and public institutes) R&D funding for government. We can suggest beyond, it could be even better for government to looking for another effective ways of increasing private R&D, since the changes of private sources which may follow public funding are lesser, then one can expect. At least we can say that public sources are causing crowding out effect of private R&D investment, not the crowding in, which is undesirable; therefore, interventions connected only to increasing funding are simply not part of what regional or central governments may aim at all. cze
dc.event XII. International Scientific Conference Liberec Economic Forum - LEF 2015 (16.09.2015 - 17.09.2015) eng
dc.peerreviewed yes eng
dc.publicationstatus postprint eng
dc.project.ID SGSFES_2015001/Ekonomický a sociální rozvoj v soukromém a veřejném sektoru eng
dc.identifier.wos 000365053000022
dc.identifier.obd 39874731


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