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An assessment of the economic impact and modes of evaluation of research and development

R&D can be considered the driving force of the modern economy. The economy is organized to utilize scarce resources. R&D through technological change results in a transformation of scarcities, in the creation of new resources, new products and new prices. "The central stupendous truth about developed economies today is that they can have the kind and scale of resources...they decide to have. It is no longer resources that limit decisions, it is the decision that makes the resources" (Toffler, 1971, p. 15). In technological society resources are created. Yet recent publications indicate a universal decline in R&D investment.
This dissertation focuses upon some important aspects of R&D decision making in Canada. The first chapter analyzes available information
about determinants and practices of R&D investment decisions, describes the inventory of normative models developed to improve decision making, and identifies empirical studies investigating their implementation. A review of the state of the art leads to the identification of the following four areas of information which are deficient: 1. information about the nature of selective perception
processes of R&D decision making,
2. the objective functions (explicit and latent) which
guide choices among alternative R&D investment opportunities,
3. the impact of R&D upon the positions of prime bargaining units organizations, and
4. the impacts of organizational structure and processes
upon implementation of investment decisions.
The first two categories of information relate to the question of what different decision units consider relevant in defining their problems and what they value. The last two categories relate to the organizational impact of R&D and the processes by which decisions are reached and implemented. These areas provide a focus for required additional research aimed at improvements in R&D decision making. This dissertation attempts to contribute to the first three areas of research outlined above. The focus in Chapter 2 is upon the impact of R&D in shifting resource shares of labour, capital and energy in the total output. Chapter 3 focuses upon processes of information selection in R&D decision making, identifying what environmental conditions are important to whom in making R&D investment decisions. Chapter 4 investigates multi-attribute preferences in R&D project selection. Each chapter draws some normative implications for R&D public policy, and the postscript identifies, promising areas for future research. Some of the major findings of this sequence of studies are: 1. Accepting a neoclassical framework of analysis, in most sectors, R&D has had no impact on input shares, indicating that scale and price effects dominate the structure of technology. Where R&D has had impact on the structure, it has sometimes had a labour using and sometimes a capital using bias.
2. Significant differences in patterns of attention to environmental conditions were identified. These differences are related to executive attributes and firm characteristics.
3. High concensus exists with respect to tradeoffs among project attributes across all firm-executive groupings.
4. Compensatory actuarial models provide a good fit with observations of R&D investment judgments. Some normative implications of the study for public policy include the following: 1. As R&D impact upon the economic objectives of the major bargaining units in firms is neutral in most cases, perhaps an effort should be made to eliminate technological development as part of the traditional arena of labour-management bargaining.
2. In creating favourable R&D investment climates, government ought to develop a sensitive strategy which recognizes explicitly the selective impact of single dimension interventions on alternative target populations.
3. The role of government as an independent insurance agent for R&D ventures is recommended to replace direct participation in project funding. / Business, Sauder School of / Graduate

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UBC/oai:circle.library.ubc.ca:2429/20924
Date January 1976
CreatorsSchwartz, S. L.
Source SetsUniversity of British Columbia
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeText, Thesis/Dissertation
RightsFor non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.

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