TY - JOUR
T1 - Labor mobility from R&D-intensive multinational companies
T2 - implications for knowledge and technology transfer
AU - Holm, Jacob Rubæk
AU - Timmermans, Bram
AU - Østergaard, Christian Richter
AU - Coad, Alex
AU - Grassano, Nicola
AU - Vezzani, Antonio
N1 - Funding Information:
Some of the ideas in this paper were previously explored on less recent data in a European Commission technical report (see Holm et al. 2017). We are grateful to seminar participants at the Fifth International workshop in Inter-Industry Relatedness in The Hague (NL), 2018, and also to the Editor (Al Link) and two anonymous reviewers, for many helpful comments and suggestions. The views expressed are purely those of the authors and may not in any circumstances be regarded as stating an official position of the European Commission. The usual caveat applies.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
PY - 2020/10/1
Y1 - 2020/10/1
N2 - Private sector R&D is largely concentrated in a few multinational companies (MNCs). The mobility of labor between these MNCs and the rest of the economy is therefore an important mechanism for the diffusion of knowledge and technology, but these flows are not without friction. This paper analyses in great detail the flow of labor between firms with specific emphasis on flows to and from R&D intensive MNCs. Using linked employer-employee data for Denmark, we match employees moving from R&D intensive MNCs to other employees switching jobs. We find that employees are more inclined to move between R&D intensive MNCs and their subsidiaries rather than between these firms and other firms in the economy. This is particularly true for high skill employees. Our results suggest that other domestic firms are to a larger extent kept out of the ‘knowledge spillover’ loop, which provides them with fewer opportunities to learn from the R&D intensive MNCs. In other words, R&D intensive MNCs and their subsidiaries form a kind of sub-labor market within the national labor market; employees exhibit higher mobility within this group of firms than between this group and the rest of the labor market.
AB - Private sector R&D is largely concentrated in a few multinational companies (MNCs). The mobility of labor between these MNCs and the rest of the economy is therefore an important mechanism for the diffusion of knowledge and technology, but these flows are not without friction. This paper analyses in great detail the flow of labor between firms with specific emphasis on flows to and from R&D intensive MNCs. Using linked employer-employee data for Denmark, we match employees moving from R&D intensive MNCs to other employees switching jobs. We find that employees are more inclined to move between R&D intensive MNCs and their subsidiaries rather than between these firms and other firms in the economy. This is particularly true for high skill employees. Our results suggest that other domestic firms are to a larger extent kept out of the ‘knowledge spillover’ loop, which provides them with fewer opportunities to learn from the R&D intensive MNCs. In other words, R&D intensive MNCs and their subsidiaries form a kind of sub-labor market within the national labor market; employees exhibit higher mobility within this group of firms than between this group and the rest of the labor market.
KW - Knowledge flows
KW - Labor mobility
KW - Multinational companies
KW - R&D
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U2 - 10.1007/s10961-020-09776-8
DO - 10.1007/s10961-020-09776-8
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85078937276
SN - 0892-9912
VL - 45
SP - 1562
EP - 1584
JO - Journal of Technology Transfer
JF - Journal of Technology Transfer
IS - 5
ER -