Applying quantile regression to 760 Finnish firms, we show that the relationship between R&D and firm performance is less straight forward than so far assumed. OLS regression analysis fails to capture the effect of R&D expenditure at different locations on the performance distribution. We reveal that R&D matters, especially on the medium quantiles, while regressing against the upper quantiles of the economic gains from innovation distribution exhibit decreasing returns scale in R&D. Our results confirm that Gaussian statistics fail to capture the most interesting part of the distribution - namely the extreme observations located in the tails.

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doi.org/10.1080/02692170903424448, hdl.handle.net/1765/21867
International Review of Applied Economics
Erasmus School of Economics

Ebersberger, B., Marsili, O., Reichstein, T., & Salter, A. (2010). Into thin air: using a quantile regression approach to explore the relationship between R&D and innovation. International Review of Applied Economics, 24(1), 95–102. doi:10.1080/02692170903424448