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National Bureau of Economic Research conference report.
The role of innovation and entrepreneurship in economic growth / edited by Aaron K. Chatterji, Josh Lerner, Scott Stern, and Michael J. Andrews. — Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2022. — 1 online resource (633 p.). — (National Bureau of Economic Research Conference Report). — Description based upon print version of record. — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/3143307.pdf>.

Record create date: 1/29/2022

Subject: Economic development.; Entrepreneurship.; Technological innovations.; Entrepreneurship; Développement économique.; Entrepreneuriat.; Innovations.; economic development.; entrepreneurs.; BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / General.; Economic development.; Entrepreneurship.; Technological innovations.

Collections: EBSCO

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This volume presents studies from experts in twelve industries, providing insights into the future role of innovation and entrepreneurship in driving economic growth across sectors. We live in an era in which innovation and entrepreneurship seem ubiquitous, particularly in regions like Silicon Valley, Boston, and the Research Triangle Park. But many metrics of economic growth, such as productivity growth and business dynamism, have been at best modest in recent years. The resolution of this apparent paradox is dramatic heterogeneity across sectors, with some industries seeing robust innovation and entrepreneurship and others seeing stagnation. By construction, the impact of innovation and entrepreneurship on overall economic performance is the cumulative impact of their effects on individual sectors. Understanding the potential for growth in the aggregate economy depends, therefore, on understanding the sector-by-sector potential for growth. This insight motivates the twelve studies of different sectors that are presented in this volume. Each study identifies specific productivity improvements enabled by innovation and entrepreneurship, for example as a result of new production technologies, increased competition, or new organizational forms. These twelve studies, along with three synthetic chapters, provide new insights on the sectoral patterns and concentration of the contributions of innovation and entrepreneurship to economic growth.

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Table of Contents

  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Beyond 140 Characters | Michael J. Andrews, Aaron K. Chatterji, and Scott Stern
  • I. Productivity Drivers
    • 1. The “Weighty” Manufacturing Sector: Transforming Raw Materials into Physical Goods | Erica R. H. Fuchs, Christophe Combemale, Kate S. Whitefoot, and Britta Glennon
    • 2. Concentration and Agglomeration of IT Innovation and Entrepreneurship: Evidence from Patenting | Chris Forman and Avi Goldfarb
    • 3. Innovation, Growth, and Structural Change in American Agriculture| Julian M. Alston and Philip G. Pardey, Comment: Brian Davern Wright
    • 4. Innovation and Entrepreneurship in the Energy Sector| David Popp, Jacquelyn Pless, Ivan Haščič, and Nick Johnstone
  • II. The On-Demand Economy
    • 5. What’s Driving Entrepreneurship and Innovation in the Transportation Sector? | Derrick Choe, Alexander Oettl, and Rob Seamans, Comment: Gilles Duranton
    • 6. The Recent Evolution of Physical Retail Markets: Online Retailing, Big Box Stores, and the Rise of Restaurants | Francine Lafontaine and Jagadeesh Sivadasan, Comment: Emek Basker
    • 7. The Servicification of the US Economy: The Role of Startups versus Incumbent Firms | Mercedes Delgado, J. Daniel Kim, and Karen G. Mills, Comment: Sharat Ganapati
    • 8. Digitization and Its Consequences for Creative-Industry Product and Labor Markets | Joel Waldfogel, Comment: Gustavo Manso
  • III. The Cost Disease Sectors
    • 9. Innovation in the US Government | Joshua R. Bruce and John M. de Figueiredo, Comment: Manuel Trajtenberg
    • 10. Venture Capital–Led Entrepreneurship in Health Care | Amitabh Chandra, Cirrus Foroughi,and Lauren Mostrom
    • 11. Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Housing | Edward Kung, Comment: Jessie Handbury
    • 12. Education and Innovation | Barbara Biasi, David Deming, and Petra Moser, Comment: Eleanor Wiske Dillon
      • Panel Remarks: Creating “Smart” Policy to Promote Entrepreneurship and Innovation | Karen G. Mills and Annie V. Dang
      • Panel Remarks: Measuring Business Innovation Using a Multidimensional Approach | Lucia Foster
    • 13. Where Innovation Happens, and Where It Does Not | Benjamin F. Jones
  • Contributors
  • Author Index
  • Subject Index

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