Measuring the macroeconomic responses to public investment in innovation: evidence from OECD countries

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Abstract

The paper aims to assess the macroeconomic impacts of government investment in Research and Development (R&D) and more generic fiscal policies by quantifying the Gross domestic product (GDP) and business R&D investment multipliers. Following the recent literature on fiscal policy, we combine the Local Projection approach with fiscal shocks estimated using Structural Vector Autoregressive modeling by focusing on a panel of 15 Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries for the 1981-2017 period. Our findings support the idea that expansionary fiscal policies can positively and persistently affect the GDP level and crowd in business R&D investment. Additionally, our results show that public investment in R&D generates the largest multiplicative effect both on GDP and business R&D than the one associated with more generic public expenditures, even when fiscal expectations are considered.

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Ciaffi, G., Deleidi, M., & Mazzucato, M. (2024). Measuring the macroeconomic responses to public investment in innovation: evidence from OECD countries. Industrial and Corporate Change, 33(2), 363–382. https://doi.org/10.1093/icc/dtae005

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