Calendrier du 21 décembre 2023
TOM (Théorie, Organisation et Marchés) Lunch Seminar
Du 21/12/2023 de 12:30 à 13:30
R1- 15
ANGELUCCI Charles(MIT Sloan School of Management)
ORZACH Roi(MIT Sloan)
Searching for Collaboration: The Dynamics of Relationship Building
Building a successful collaboration is often a time-intensive and gradual process. We model collaborative dynamics with self-enforcing incentives. Two players are presented with infinitely many ex-ante identical projects, each yielding asymmetric benefits. Every period, they collectively explore or exploit multiple projects and make voluntary transfers to each other. After exploring a project, players learn its benefits and choose whether to exploit the project in future periods. We show that lengthy exploration occurs, and that the way the collaboration evolves exhibits significant path dependence. Players temporarily exploit projects, return to previously abandoned projects, and initially explore a limited number of projects
brown bag Travail et Économie Publique
Du 21/12/2023 de 12:30 à 13:30
PSE- 48 boulevard Jourdan, 74014 Paris, salle R1-09
GUILLOUZOUIC Arthur (IPP)
From public labs to private firms: magnitude and channels of R&D spillovers
Introducing a new measure of scientific proximity between private firms and public research groups and exploiting a multi-billion euro financing program of academic clusters in France, we provide causal evidence of spillovers from academic research to private sector firms. Firms in the top quartile of exposure to the funding shock increase their R&D effort by 20% compared to the bottom quartile. We exploit reports produced by funded clusters, complemented by data on labor mobility and R&D public–private partnerships, to provide evidence on the channels for these spillovers. We show that spillovers are driven by outsourcing of R&D activities by the private to the public sectors and, to a lesser extent, by labor mobility from one to the other and by informal contacts. We discuss the policy implications of funding academic research to stimulate private R&D.