Abstract

The article evaluates the impact of tax support for R&D on the volume of R&D outputs generated by companies. The number of patent applications was chosen as the R&D metric for business output. Both linear dependence using linear regression and non-linear dependence using decision trees were used within the research. The significance of indirect support in the context of other sources of funding R&D activities of companies was primarily assessed. The dependence of the number of patent applications on individual sources of financing of the Business Enterprise Expenditure on R&D was examined. Even after scaling variables, the research in the period under review confirmed the strongest dependence between the number of patent applications and the financial resources provided by the Business enterprise sector for all countries surveyed. Subsequently, the model reduced by the impact of Business enterprise sector resources was created. Of the three remaining variables considered, the analysis showed the strongest dependence of the number of patent applications on the amount of indirect support. The research points to the fact that impact of tax support on the volume of relevant R&D outputs is relatively significant.

Highlights

  • Our society is currently facing new challenges related to dynamic changes in traditional ways of creating added value, demographic trends, climate change and social change

  • The aim of the research was to determine the extent of the effect of indirect support on the volume of Research and experimental development (R&D) outputs generated by companies using statistical models

  • The number of patent applications was chosen as a relevant indicator of R&D volume

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Summary

Introduction

Our society is currently facing new challenges related to dynamic changes in traditional ways of creating added value, demographic trends, climate change and social change. These new challenges need to be addressed by both innovative and research strategies of individual countries and multinational clusters. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) published the so-called Frascati manual (hereinafter, FM) in 1963 following an expert meeting in the field of research and development statistics. This is a document intended for the evaluation of scientific and. In accordance with the requirements of FM, the criteria of novelty, creativity, systematic character, uncertainty and reproducibility should be met when creating R&D output

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