Journal article
Authors list: Roder, C; Herrmann, R; Connor, JM
Publication year: 2000
Pages: 743-748
Journal: Applied Economics Letters
Volume number: 7
Issue number: 11
ISSN: 1350-4851
eISSN: 1466-4291
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.1080/135048500421395
Publisher: Taylor and Francis Group
Abstract:
Economic theory suggests that market structure variables influence technical change, growth and new product introductions. Based on a broad data set for new product introductions in various food industries, it is elaborated in this article how market structure variables affect innovative activities in the US food sector. It is different from earlier studies in the way that cross-sectional and time-series data are combined and panel data models are used in the econometric analysis. A major result is that new product introductions are driven by market structure variables and industry-specific characteristics, i.e. fixed effects. A significant determinant of new food product introductions is the concentration ratio which affects the number of innovations in a nonlinear form. The fixed-effects estimates reveal a U-type effect of concentration on innovations. Furthermore, the number of firms, the degree of existing product differentiation and the size of a market show a positive influence on the number of innovations. From a methodological point of view, plain OLS models yield biased results on the concentration-innovation linkage and on the relationship between the size of a market and innovations. Therefore, it is very important to include sector-specific characteristics as is done in the fixed-effects models.
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Roder, C., Herrmann, R. and Connor, J. (2000) Determinants of new product introductions in the US food industry: a panel-model approach, Applied Economics Letters, 7(11), pp. 743-748. https://doi.org/10.1080/135048500421395
APA Citation style: Roder, C., Herrmann, R., & Connor, J. (2000). Determinants of new product introductions in the US food industry: a panel-model approach. Applied Economics Letters. 7(11), 743-748. https://doi.org/10.1080/135048500421395