CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR



chapter twenty-four

Technology, R&D, and Efficiency

LECTURE NOTES

I. Learning objectives – In this chapter students will learn:

A. The differences between an invention, an innovation, and technological diffusion.

B. How entrepreneurs and other innovators further technological advance.

C. How a firm determines its optimal amount of research and development (R&D).

D. Why firms can benefit from their innovation even though rivals have an incentive to imitate it.

E. About the role of market structure in promoting technological advance.

F. How technological advance enhances productive and allocative efficiency.

II. Technological Advance: Invention, innovation and diffusion.

A. In the short run it is assumed that technology, plant, and equipment are constant. In the long run, the size of the plant can change and firms can enter or leave the industry; in the very long run, technological advances can occur.

B. Technological advance is a three-step process that shifts the economy’s production possibilities curve outward-enabling more production of goods and services.

1. The most basic element of technological advance is invention: The discovery of a product or process and the proof that it will work.

2. Innovation is the first successful commercial introduction of a new product, the first use of a new production, or the creation of a new form of business enterprise.

3. Diffusion is the spread of innovation through imitation or copying.

C. Expenditures on research and development include direct efforts by business toward invention, innovation and diffusion. Government also engages in R&D, particularly for national defense.

1. In 2004 total U.S. R&D expenditures (business plus government) were $312 billion, 2.66 percent of U.S. GDP. (See Global Perspective 24.1 for comparison.)

2. American business spent $200 billion on R&D in 2004. (See Figure 24.1 for breakdown into categories.)

D. The modern view of technological advance.

1. For decades economists treated technological advances as an element largely external to the market system — a random outside force to which the economy adjusted.

2. Contemporary economists see capitalism itself as the driving force of technological advance, providing the incentives and motives for firms and individuals to seek profitable opportunities.

III. The role of entrepreneurs and other innovators.

A. The entrepreneur is an initiator, innovator, and risk bearer—the catalyst who uses resources in new and unique ways to produce new and unique goods and services.

B. Other innovators, who do not bear personal financial risk, include key executives, scientists, and others engaged in commercial R&D activities.

C. Often entrepreneurs form new companies called “start-ups”, i.e., firms that focus on creating and introducing new products or employing a specific new production or distribution technique.

D. Innovators are also found within existing corporations supported by working conditions and pay incentives that foster creative thinking. Some firms have chosen to “spin off” the R&D function into new, more flexible and innovative companies.

E. Product innovation and development are creative endeavors with intangible rewards of personal satisfaction, but the “winners” can also realize huge financial gains. Success gives entrepreneurs and innovative firms access to more resources. The entrepreneurs are found in many different countries around the world.

F. Technological advance is supported by the scientific research of universities and government sponsored laboratories. Firms increasingly help to fund university research that relates to their products.

IV. The firm’s optimal amount of R&D.

A. Finding the optimal amount of R&D is an application of basic economics.

1. To earn the greatest profit, a firm should expand a particular activity until its marginal benefit equals its marginal cost.

2. The R&D spending decision is complex because the estimation of future benefits is highly uncertain while costs are immediate and more clear-cut.

B. Interest rate cost of funds: Whatever the source of R&D funds, the opportunity cost of these funds is measurable by the current rate of interest. (See Figure 24.2) Possible sources include the following:

1. Bank loans

2. Bonds

3. Retained earnings

4. Venture capital

5. Personal savings

C. A firm’s marginal benefit from R&D is its expected rate of return on the expenditures. The curve showing the expected rate of return slopes downward because of diminishing returns to R&D expenditures. (See Figure 24.3)

D. Optimal R&D expenditures occur when the interest rate cost of funds is equal to the expected rate of return. (See Figure 24.4)

1. Many R&D expenditures may be affordable but not worthwhile because the marginal benefit is less than the marginal cost.

2. Expenditures are planned on the basis of expected returns. R&D decisions carry a great deal of risk. There is no certainty of outcome.

V. Increased profit via innovation.

A. Increased profit via product innovation.

1. Consumers will buy a new product only if it increases the total utility they obtain from their limited incomes. They purchase products that have the highest marginal utility per dollar. (Review Chapter 19 and Table 19.1)

a. Consumer acceptance of a new product depends on both marginal utility and price.

b. The expected return that motivates product innovation may not be realized. Expensive ‘“flops” are common.

c. Most product innovation consists of incremental improvements to existing products rather than radical inventions.

B. Reduced cost via process innovation.

1. Firms can increase output by introducing better production methods or by using more productive capital equipment.

2. An innovation that increases total product at each level of resource usage lowers the average total cost of a unit of output and thus enhances the firm’s profit. (Figure 24.5)

VI. Imitation and R&D Incentives

A. A firm’s rivals may deliberately employ the “fast-second strategy,” allowing the originating firm to incur the high costs of R&D and then entering quickly if the product is a success.

B. There are protections, potential advantages, and benefits of being first.

1. Some technological breakthroughs can be patented; they cannot be legally imitated for two decades. (See global perspective 24.2) Many holders of U.S. patents are citizens or firms of foreign nations.

2. Copyrights and trademarks reduce the problem of direct copying. (See Concept Illustration on Monopoly game)

3. Along with trademark protection, brand name recognition may give the original innovator a marketing advantage.

4. Trade secrets may prevent imitation of a product, and sometimes it is the process that is the key to success. The originating firm may also gain an advantage simply by learning on the job. Consider This … Trade Secrets

5. Time lags between innovation and diffusion often permit originating firms to realize a substantial economic profit.

6. A final advantage of being first is the potential for an attractive buyout offer. This allows the innovative entrepreneur to take their rewards immediately without the uncertainty of production and marketing on their own.

7. There continue to be high levels of R&D that would not be the case if imitation consistently and severely depressed actual rates of return on these expenditures. (See Figure 24.6)

VII. Role of Market Structure

A. Market structure and technological advance.

1. Pure competition—Although purely competitive firms may have an incentive to keep ahead of their competitors, the small size of the firms and the fact that there are no barriers to entry and therefore they can earn only a normal profit in the long run, leads to serious questions as to whether such producers can benefit from and finance substantial R&D programs.

2. Monopolistic competition—There is a strong profit incentive to engage in product development in this market structure. However, most firms remain small, which limits their ability to secure financing for R&D. Economic profits are usually temporary because there are few barriers to entry.

3. Oligopoly—The oligopolistic market structure is conducive to technical advance. Firms are large with ongoing economic profits, are protected by barriers to entry, and have large volume of sales. Although oligopolistic firms have the financial resources to engage in R&D, they are often complacent.

4. Pure monopoly—Pure monopolists have little incentive to engage in R&D. Since profits are protected by absolute barriers to entry, the only reason for R&D would be defensive, i.e., to reduce the risk of a new product or process that might destroy the monopoly.

B. Inverted-U Theory (Figure 24.7)

1. The inverted-U suggests that both very low concentration industries and very high concentration industries expend a relatively small percentage of their sales revenue on R&D.

2. The optimal market structure for technological advance seems to be an industry in which there is a mix of large oligopolistic firms (a 40 to 60 percent concentration ratio) with several highly innovative smaller firms.

3. Competitive firms are small, which makes it difficult for them to finance the R&D, and there is easy entry by competitors. Where firms have a substantial amount of monopoly power, monopoly profits are large and innovation will likely not add much more to the firm’s profits.

4. The level of R&D spending within an industry seems to be determined more by the industry’s scientific character and “technological opportunities” than from its market structure.

VIII. Technological Advance and Efficiency

A. Productive efficiency is improved when a technological advance involves process innovation and a reduction in costs. (Figure 24.5a and b)

B. Allocative efficiency is improved when a technological advance involves a new product that increases the utility consumers can obtain from their limited income.

C. Innovation can create monopoly power through patents or the advantages of being first, reducing the benefit to society from the innovation.

D. Innovation can also reduce or even disintegrate existing monopoly power by providing competition where there was none. In this case, economic efficiency is enhanced because the competition drives prices down closer to marginal cost and minimum ATC.

E. Creative destruction occurs when the innovation of new products or production methods destroys the monopoly positions of firms committed to existing products and their old ways of doing business.

IX. LAST WORD: On the Path to the Personal Computer and Internet

Technological advance is clearly evident in the development of the modern personal computer and the emergence of the Internet. This is a brief history of these events.

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