The Heterogeneous Impact of Market Size on Innovation:Evidence from French Firm-Level Exports

Philippe Aghion (Collège de France, LSE et PSE), Antonin Bergeaud (Banque de France et CEP), Matthieu Lequien (Insee-Dese – Département des études économiques – Division « Études Macroéconomiques » - Banque de France et PSE), Marc J. Melitz (Harvard et NBER)

Documents de travail
No G2020-11
Paru le :Paru le04/11/2020
Philippe Aghion (Collège de France, LSE et PSE), Antonin Bergeaud (Banque de France et CEP), Matthieu Lequien (Insee-Dese – Département des études économiques – Division « Études Macroéconomiques » - Banque de France et PSE), Marc J. Melitz (Harvard et NBER)
Documents de travail No G2020-11- November 2020

We analyze how demand conditions faced by a firm in its export markets impact its innovation decisions. To disentangle the direction of causality between export demand and innovation, we construct a firm-level export demand shock which responds to aggregate conditions in a firm's export destinations but is exogenous to firm-level decisions. Using exhaustive data covering the French manufacturing sector, we show that French firms respond to exogenous growth shocks in their export destinations by patenting more; and that this response is entirely driven by the subset of initially more productive firms. The patent response arises 2 to 5 years after a demand shock, highlighting the time required to innovate. In contrast, the demand shock raises contemporaneous sales and employment for all firms, without any notable differences between high and low productivity firms. We show that this finding of a skewed innovation response to common demand shocks arises naturally from a model of endogenous innovation and competition with firm heterogeneity. The market size increase drives all firms to innovate more by increasing the innovation rents; yet by inducing more entry and thus more competition, it also discourages innovation by low productivity firms.