Does foreign ownership enhance technological innovation amongst manufacturing firms in Sub- Saharan Africa?
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Many African nations have over time relied on the use of foreign
ownership to enhance technological innovation in manufacturing
firms. The literature on the subject is, however, mixed. While foreign-
owned firms can benefit from the technological innovations
of foreign sources because of their superior nature relative to
local innovation systems, these innovations may not be forthcoming
for several reasons, including an uncompetitive business
environment. In this paper, we test this hypothesis for Sub-
Saharan Africa by relying on a sample of 1157 manufacturing
firms from the World Bank Enterprise Surveys. By defining technological
innovation as product and process innovations and using
the Probit estimator, we find that foreign-owned firms are less
likely to introduce product innovation. For process innovation, we
did not find foreign ownership to have a significant effect. These
findings have some implications for policy. First, the paper throws
a spotlight on the kinds of foreign affiliations in the manufacturing
sector of Africa and suggests that there must be a deliberate
effort to attract the forms that are beneficial to local innovation
systems. Second, the paper finds that an improvement in the
general business environment can be crucial in attracting foreign
firms that will improve local innovation systems.
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Research Article