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Innovative partnerships resulting from high-skilled emigration

Kristie Briggs (Department of Economics and Finance, Creighton University, Omaha, Nebraska, USA)

International Journal of Development Issues

ISSN: 1446-8956

Article publication date: 3 July 2017

191

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to examine whether emigration of high-skilled labor creates a positive effect in the home country by generating multi-country joint patent relationships between home and destination country-pairs.

Design/methodology/approach

A panel of data that uniquely captures the country of origin of patent applicants is used to assess if and how high-skilled emigration contributes to the prevalence of multi-country joint patents in a country. The analysis is conducted both in aggregate and across sub-samples based on the per capita income level of the home country. Finally, the role of absorptive capacity as a control variable is robustly considered.

Findings

Results suggest that emigration of high-skilled labor positively impacts the prevalence of multi-country joint patent ownership when emigration originates from middle- and high-income countries. Support for such “brain gain” via knowledge sharing in innovation is absent when high-skilled labor emigrates from low-income countries.

Originality/value

The analysis highlights a specific avenue by which the home country benefits from high-skilled emigration. It also provides comparative analysis across home countries of different income levels, which can provide insight into the external validity of papers using high-income country samples of innovative performance when assessing knowledge spillovers.

Keywords

Citation

Briggs, K. (2017), "Innovative partnerships resulting from high-skilled emigration", International Journal of Development Issues, Vol. 16 No. 2, pp. 161-173. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJDI-10-2016-0063

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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