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Why Schumpeter was Right: Innovation, Market Power, and Creative Destruction in 1920s America

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2004

TOM NICHOLAS
Affiliation:
An economics consultant for the Brattle Group. E-mail: tom.nicholas@brattle.com.

Abstract

Are firms with strong market positions powerful engines of technological progress? Joseph Schumpeter thought so, but his hypothesis has proved difficult to verify empirically. This article highlights Schumpeterian market-power and creative-destruction effects in a sample of early-twentieth-century U.S. industrial firms; his contention that an efficiently functioning capital market has a positive effect on the rate of innovation is also confirmed. Despite market power abuses by incumbents, the extent of innovation stands out: 21 percent of patents assigned to the firms sampled between 1920 and 1928 are cited in patents granted between 1976 and 2002.

Type
ARTICLES
Copyright
© 2003 The Economic History Association

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