4.6 Article

Do Financing Constraints Matter for Technological and Non-technological Innovation? A (Re)examination of Developing Markets

Journal

EMERGING MARKETS FINANCE AND TRADE
Volume 57, Issue 9, Pages 2739-2766

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/1540496X.2019.1695593

Keywords

Financing constraints; technological innovation; radical innovation

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Drawing on data from the World Bank Enterprise Surveys in twenty-one countries, this paper provides consistent evidence of financial frictions hindering firms from introducing technological and soft forms of innovation. The study finds that the impact of financing constraints varies across different types of innovation, with a stronger influence on incremental innovation.
Drawing on a rich data from the World Bank Enterprise Surveys from twenty-one countries, this paper finds consistent evidence of the role of financial frictions as an impediment to a firm's likelihood of introducing technological innovations as well as soft forms (e.g., organizational-managerial and marketing innovations). After controlling for endogeneity concerns, we show that this empirical evidence is robust to alternative indicators of financing constraints, complementarity between innovation types, and various subsamples of potential innovators and non-innovators. Furthermore, in a first, we find that financing constraints' impact decreases in the degree of innovation radicalness. In other words, the impact of financing constraints is stronger for incremental innovation than it is for radical innovations, highlighting the need to take into account the degree of innovation radicalness in assessing the finance-innovation nexus. These findings suggest a crucial role for bank-based financing in promoting various types of innovation in developing countries.

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