This Website uses cookies. By using this website you are agreeing to our use of cookies and to the terms and conditions listed in our data protection policy. Read more

Canadian Journal of Economics

High–Technology Subsidies in General Equilibrium: A Sector–Specific Approach

Journal Article
Reference
Ekholm, Karolina and Johan Torstensson (1997). “High–Technology Subsidies in General Equilibrium: A Sector–Specific Approach”. Canadian Journal of Economics 30, 1184–1203. doi.org/10.2307/136316

Authors
Karolina Ekholm, Johan Torstensson

We use a specific-factor model to examine the conditions under which policy-makers are able to increase aggregate production of high-tech goods by production or R&D-subsidies in the short and long run. The difficulties for the policy-maker in designing a subsidy scheme that succeeds in expanding aggregate high-tech production involve taking into account the trade-off between resources used in R&D and production of high-tech goods, the relative impact of different R&D activities on productivity, and the ease with which resources may be attracted from the non-high-tech sector of the economy to the various high-tech industries.