3.8 Article

Exploring innovation creation across rural and urban firms: Analysis of the National Survey of Business Competitiveness

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND PUBLIC POLICY
Volume 7, Issue 4, Pages 357-376

Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/JEPP-D-18-00026

Keywords

Innovation; National Survey of Business Competitiveness; Negative binomial; Patent counts; Rural enterprise innovation survey; Rural firms; Rural-urban innovation gap

Categories

Funding

  1. USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture [2016-68006-24852]

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Purpose The innovation creation literature primarily focuses on urban firms/regions or relies heavily on these data; less studied are rural firms and areas in this regard. The purpose of this paper is to employ a new firm-level data set, national in scale, and analyze characteristics that potentially influence innovation creation across rural and urban firms. Design/methodology/approach The authors use the 2014 National Survey of Business Competitiveness (NSBC) covering multiple firm-level variables related to innovation creation combined with secondary data reflecting the regional business and innovative environments where these firms operate. The number of patent applications filed by these firms measures their innovation creation, and the paper employs a negative binomial regression estimation for analysis. Findings After controlling for industry, county and state factors, rural and urban firms differ in their innovation creation characteristics and behaviors, suggesting that urban firms capitalize on their resources better than rural firms. Other major findings of the paper provide evidence that: first, for rural firms, the influence of university R&D is relevant to innovation creation, but their perception of university-provided information is not significant; and second, rural firms that are willing to try, but fail, in terms of innovation creation have a slight advantage over other rural firms less willing to take on the risk. Originality/value This paper is one of the first to analyze the 2014 NSBC, a firm-level national survey covering a wide range of innovation-related variables. The authors combine it with other regional secondary data, and use appropriate analytical modeling to provide empirical evidence of influencing factors on innovation creation across rural and urban firms.

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