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Published: 2018
Authors: Richard Harris, Trinh Le
Internalising
knowledge from outside the firm
is key to success.
To the best of our knowledge, this paper reports the first set of nationally representative results on the importance of ‘absorptive capacity’. Absorptive capacity is generally defined as a firm's ability to internalise external knowledge.
Using data principally from the New Zealand Business Operations Survey, we measure absorptive capacity across a 10-year period and investigate if it remains stable in the long term. This is followed by considering how firms’ characteristics vary across levels of absorptive capacity and most importantly whether such capacity determines firms’ productivity performance across the primary, manufacturing and service sectors.
Our results show that relative to other influences, absorptive capacity as measured here has a substantial influence on exporting, innovation, and undertaking R&D. Set against relatively poor performance, the paper concludes with a discussion of how government should consider helping firms to boost their levels of absorptive capacity.
DOI: doi.org/10.29310/WP.2018.01
Harris, Richard and Trinh Le. 2018. "Absorptive capacity in New Zealand firms: Measurement and importance." Motu Working Paper 18-01. Motu Economic and Public Policy Research. Wellington, New Zealand. doi: https//doi.org/10.29310/wp.2018.01
New Zealand Productivity Commission, as a research input into its frontier firms inquiry.
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