Abstract

Entrepreneurship is one of the main pillars of growth in any economy. Achieving a high rate of entrepreneurship in a region has become the priority objective of governments and firms. However, in many cases, new firm creation is conditioned by relations or collaboration in innovation with agents from other countries. Previous literature has analyzed the mechanisms that foster entrepreneurship. This paper attempts to shed light on the influence of international patent collaboration (IPC) on entrepreneurial activity at country level taking into account the timing of this relationship. An empirical study is proposed to verify whether IPC leads to greater entrepreneurship and to analyze the gestation period between international patenting actions and firm creation. Using the Generalized Method of Moments, the two hypotheses proposed were tested in a data panel of 30 countries for the period 2005–2017. Results show the influence of IPC in promoting entrepreneurship in the same year, but especially in the following year. The study offers implications for entrepreneurs and public agents. IPC affects the integration and interaction of international agents in a country, favors the production of new knowledge, and increases positive externalities in a territory. All this facilitates the creation of new companies with a high innovative component.

Highlights

  • Entrepreneurship is essential for generating social, technological, and economic growth (Romer 1986; Audretsch and Acs 1994; Ács and Varga 2005; Acs 2006; Hafer 2013)

  • Before estimating the model pro‐ posed and in order to detect any problems of multicollinearity, a variance inflation factor (VIF) analysis was performed (Table 4)

  • Our results seem to indicate that international patent collaboration (IPC) helps detect new business opportunities, increases acquisition of precise knowledge, and creates stronger networks that favor the appearance of new ventures with a global strategy

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Summary

Summary highlights

Contributions: This paper attempts to shed light on the influence of international patent collaboration (IPC) on entrepreneurial activity at country level, taking into account the timing of this relationship. Patents have already been related with entrepreneurship but, as far as we know, there is only one international empirical study on this relation (Goel et al 2016) This previous paper focuses on comparing the effects of knowledge flows on the formal and informal sectors and determining multilateral spatial spillovers of innovation, but it does not analyze the timing of the relationship. This paper attempts to shed light on the influence of IPC on entrepreneurial activity at country level taking into account the timing of this relationship To address this gap in the literature, we pro‐ pose one main question: Does international patent collaboration have an effect on. Policymakers can establish innovative pro‐ grams to enhance entrepreneurship rates

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