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Featured researches published by Francesco Venturini.


Industry and Innovation | 2014

R&D and Productivity in High-Tech Manufacturing: A Comparison between Italy and Spain

Alessandro Sterlacchini; Francesco Venturini

Using data for 12 manufacturing industries over the period 1980–2006, we perform for Italy and Spain a dynamic panel estimation of the long-run elasticity of total factor productivity (TFP) with respect to R&D capital. In spite of recording a level of R&D capital lower than Italian industries, the technology-based industries in Spain have experienced a similar or higher long-run impact on TFP. This is mainly attributable to what occurred from the mid-1990s onwards when, thanks to increasing R&D efforts, the Spanish industries have been able to catch up with respect to the Italian ones. These findings suggest that, also in countries classified as technology followers, R&D investment is a crucial condition for boosting manufacturing productivity.


Economics of Innovation and New Technology | 2017

Effectiveness of R&D subsidies during the crisis: firm-level evidence across EU countries

David Aristei; Alessandro Sterlacchini; Francesco Venturini

ABSTRACT This paper is one of the first attempts in the literature to evaluate the effectiveness of R&D policies in Europe during the great crisis of the late 2000s. Using homogenous firm-level data for the largest EU Member States over the period 2007–2009, we test whether manufacturing firms receiving public subsidies spent more on R&D. The analysis is performed using both non-parametric techniques and parametric estimation methods accounting for the possible endogenous selectivity of R&D subsidies. The hypothesis of full crowding-out is rejected in all countries under exam as firms did not replace their own resources with public grants. However, these firms did not allocate additional funds to research and hence, differently from earlier works, we do not find evidence for additionality effects of R&D subsidies. Our estimates indicate that, albeit not expansive, public subsidies to R&D thwarted the reduction of firm R&D efforts in the aftermath of economic crisis.


Archive | 2014

R&D Policy and Schumpeterian Growth: Theory and Evidence

Antonio Minniti; Francesco Venturini

In recent years, a large body of empirical research has investigated whether the predictions of secondgeneration growth models are consistent with actual data. This strand of literature has focused on the longrun properties of these models by using productivity and innovation data but has not directly assessed the effectiveness of R&D policy in promoting innovation and economic growth. In the present paper, we fill this gap in the literature by providing a unified growth setting that is empirically tested with US manufacturing industry data. Our analysis shows that R&D policy has a persistent, if not permanent, impact on the rate of economic growth and that the economy rapidly adjusts to policy changes. The impact of R&D tax credits on economic growth appears to be long lasting and statistically robust. Conversely, more generous R&D subsidies are associated with an increase in the rate of economic growth in the short run only, indicating that, at best, this policy instrument has only temporary effects. Overall, the evidence regarding the effectiveness of R&D policy provides more support for fully endogenous growth theory than for semi-endogenous growth theory.


Review of Income and Wealth | 2018

Off-shoring, specialization and R&D*

Ioannis Bournakis; Michela Vecchi; Francesco Venturini

This paper investigates whether off-shoring promotes technological specialization by reallocating resources towards high-tech industries and/or stimulating within industry R&D. Using data for the US, Japan and Europe, our results show that material off-shoring promotes high-tech specialization through input reallocation between sectors, while service off-shoring favours technologically advanced production by increasing within-industry productivity, mainly via its positive impact on R&D. Conversely, we find that the increasing fragmentation of core production tasks, captured by narrow off-shoring, has adverse effects on technological specialisation, which suggests that this type of off-shoring is mainly pursued for cost-reduction motives.


Economics of Innovation and New Technology | 2018

The impact of educational mismatch on returns to R&D: evidence from manufacturing in OECD countries

Ioana A. Igna; Francesco Venturini

ABSTRACT This paper investigates the effect of educational mismatch of R&D workers on firms returns to innovation. R&D labour mismatch emerges when R&D workers have competencies different from those required by their occupation providing a contribution to innovation lower than in the case of perfect educational matching. By estimating a knowledge production function on data for 13 manufacturing industries from 16 OECD countries between 2003 and 2011, we find that R&D labour mismatch may cause returns to R&D investment to be between 10 and 15% lower than estimated in the literature. These results are robust to controlling for institutional factors, simultaneity feedbacks and other mis-specification issues. The detrimental effect of the misallocation of R&D labour is found to be stronger in those sectors where R&D activities have greater potential (returns), i.e. high-tech sectors.


Archive | 2015

Functional Income Distribution in European Transition Countries

Ana Rincon-Aznar; Michela Vecchi; Francesco Venturini

The labour share, the proportion of income that is distributed to workers, has been decreasing in most OECD countries since the mid-1980s, a phenomenon that has attracted much interest among economists and policy makers because of its implications for growth and welfare. In fact, the labour share is considered a measure of how the benefits of growth are distributed between labour and capital, and its decrease indicates that workers in a country are getting a declining share of the wealth produced within that country.


European Economic Review | 2012

Looking into the black box of Schumpeterian growth theories: An empirical assessment of R&D races

Francesco Venturini


Research Policy | 2015

The Modern Drivers of Productivity

Francesco Venturini


Journal of Industry, Competition and Trade | 2013

Boosting Manufacturing Productivity Through R&D: International Comparisons with Special Focus on Italy

Alessandro Sterlacchini; Francesco Venturini


Journal of Productivity Analysis | 2016

Product market regulation and innovation efficiency

Chiara Franco; Fabio Pieri; Francesco Venturini

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Michela Vecchi

National Institute of Economic and Social Research

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Ana Rincon-Aznar

National Institute of Economic and Social Research

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Neil Foster-McGregor

Johannes Kepler University of Linz

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