What Shapes Local Innovation Policies? Empirical Evidence from Japanese Cities
Increasing attention has been paid to regional innovation systems. However, previous studies have so far only focused on (the regional impact of) national policies or specific regions. Despite increasing attention to regional and local innovation policies, no studies have been carried out to date on...
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doaj-2e05b69fbdeb41868a219f8c3c0d95802020-11-25T01:40:00ZengMDPI AGAdministrative Sciences2076-33872020-02-011011110.3390/admsci10010011admsci10010011What Shapes Local Innovation Policies? Empirical Evidence from Japanese CitiesHiroyuki Okamuro0Junichi Nishimura1Graduate School of Economics, Hitotsubashi University, Naka 2-1, Kunitachi Tokyo 186-8601, JapanFaculty of Economics, Gakushuin University, Mejiro 1-5-1, Toshima Tokyo 171-0031, JapanIncreasing attention has been paid to regional innovation systems. However, previous studies have so far only focused on (the regional impact of) national policies or specific regions. Despite increasing attention to regional and local innovation policies, no studies have been carried out to date on the factors of implementation and design of local research and development (R&D) subsidy programs at the city level. Our research fills this gap by using information on R&D subsidy programs from local authorities in Japan collected via websites and our original survey. Thus, our research aims at empirically investigating the determinants of both implementation and design of local R&D subsidy programs at the city level (length and upper limit of subsidies, and flexibility of subsidy conditions) considering both demand- and supply-side factors. We employ probit models for basic empirical estimations and provide some robustness checks. The empirical results suggest that, after controlling for city type and population size, supply-side factors including local government conditions significantly affect the implementation of public R&D subsidy programs. In contrast, we find that demand-side factors matter more for the design of subsidy programs than supply-side factors.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3387/10/1/11innovation policylocal authorityr&d subsidypolicy designcityjapan |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Hiroyuki Okamuro Junichi Nishimura |
spellingShingle |
Hiroyuki Okamuro Junichi Nishimura What Shapes Local Innovation Policies? Empirical Evidence from Japanese Cities Administrative Sciences innovation policy local authority r&d subsidy policy design city japan |
author_facet |
Hiroyuki Okamuro Junichi Nishimura |
author_sort |
Hiroyuki Okamuro |
title |
What Shapes Local Innovation Policies? Empirical Evidence from Japanese Cities |
title_short |
What Shapes Local Innovation Policies? Empirical Evidence from Japanese Cities |
title_full |
What Shapes Local Innovation Policies? Empirical Evidence from Japanese Cities |
title_fullStr |
What Shapes Local Innovation Policies? Empirical Evidence from Japanese Cities |
title_full_unstemmed |
What Shapes Local Innovation Policies? Empirical Evidence from Japanese Cities |
title_sort |
what shapes local innovation policies? empirical evidence from japanese cities |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Administrative Sciences |
issn |
2076-3387 |
publishDate |
2020-02-01 |
description |
Increasing attention has been paid to regional innovation systems. However, previous studies have so far only focused on (the regional impact of) national policies or specific regions. Despite increasing attention to regional and local innovation policies, no studies have been carried out to date on the factors of implementation and design of local research and development (R&D) subsidy programs at the city level. Our research fills this gap by using information on R&D subsidy programs from local authorities in Japan collected via websites and our original survey. Thus, our research aims at empirically investigating the determinants of both implementation and design of local R&D subsidy programs at the city level (length and upper limit of subsidies, and flexibility of subsidy conditions) considering both demand- and supply-side factors. We employ probit models for basic empirical estimations and provide some robustness checks. The empirical results suggest that, after controlling for city type and population size, supply-side factors including local government conditions significantly affect the implementation of public R&D subsidy programs. In contrast, we find that demand-side factors matter more for the design of subsidy programs than supply-side factors. |
topic |
innovation policy local authority r&d subsidy policy design city japan |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3387/10/1/11 |
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