The Decline in Corporate Research: Should We Worry? | Historical & Economic Contexts

The Center for Innovation Policy's conference, "The Decline in Corporate Research: Should We Worry?", was held on March 31, 2017, at Duke's "Duke in D.C." offices.

Panel 2: Historical and Economic Contexts

Historical perspective on corporate R&D
David Hounshell, Carnegie-Mellon

Economic implications of research investments
Carol Corrado, The Conference Board

How research and innovation have changed
William Raduchel, Independent Director & Georgetown
McDonough School of Business

Government data and research point to a long decline in US corporate investment in upstream research. How pervasive is this trend across industries, technologies, and firms of different sizes? How does it compare with research spending by the federal government, universities, and companies abroad? Does it reflect less reliance on research, whoever performs it? Is it explained by capital market pressures, global competition, or other factors? Has it contributed to the slowdown in productivity growth? Are there other reasons policymakers should be concerned? If so, what policy levers should they look to—e.g., intellectual property, tax, government R&D spending, or antitrust enforcement?

This program was sponsored by a grant from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation.