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Do we innovate atop giants' shoulders?

Fushu Luan (Nanjing Audit University, Nanjing, China)
Yang Chen (Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, Suzhou, China)
Ming He (Xi'an Jiaotong-Liverpool University, Suzhou, China)
Donghyun Park (Asian Development Bank, Mandaluyong City, Philippines)

European Journal of Innovation Management

ISSN: 1460-1060

Article publication date: 13 December 2022

Issue publication date: 29 April 2024

199

Abstract

Purpose

The main purpose of this paper is to explore whether the nature of innovation is accumulative or radical and to what extent past year accumulation of technology stock can predict future innovation. More importantly, the authors are concerned with whether a change of policy regime or a variance in the quality of technology will moderate the nature of innovation.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors examined a dataset of 3.6 million Chinese patents during 1985–2015 and constructed more than 5 million citation pairs across 8 sections and 128 classes to track knowledge spillover across technology fields. The authors used this citation dataset to calculate the technology innovation network. The authors constructed a measure of upstream invention, interacting the pre-existing technology innovation network with historical patent growth in each technology field, and estimated measure's impact on future innovation since 2005. The authors also constructed three sets of metrics – technology dependence, centrality and scientific value – to identify innovation quality and a policy dummy to consider the impact of policy on innovation.

Findings

Innovation growth is built upon past year accumulation and technology spillover. Innovation grows faster for technologies that are more central and grows more slowly for more valuable technologies. A pro-innovation and pro-intellectual property right (IPR) policy plays a positive and significant role in driving technical progress. The authors also found that for technologies that have faster access to new information or larger power to control knowledge flow, the upstream and downstream innovation linkage is stronger. However, this linkage is weaker for technologies that are more novel or general. On most occasions, the nature of innovation was less responsive to policy shock.

Originality/value

This paper contributes to the debate on the nature of innovation by determining whether upstream innovation has strong predictive power on future innovation. The authors develop the assumption used in the technology spillover literature by considering a time-variant, directional and asymmetric matrix to model technology diffusion. For the first time, the authors answer how the nature of innovation will vary depending on the technology network configurations and policy environment. In addition to contributing to the academic debate, the authors' study has important implications for economic growth and industrial or innovation management policies.

Keywords

Citation

Luan, F., Chen, Y., He, M. and Park, D. (2024), "Do we innovate atop giants' shoulders?", European Journal of Innovation Management, Vol. 27 No. 4, pp. 1403-1449. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJIM-01-2022-0054

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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