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Journal Article

Inter-firm cooperation and innovation – insights from Nigeria

Authors

  • Dohse
  • D.
  • Fehrenbacher
  • S.

Publication Date

forthcoming

DOI

10.1007/s13132-024-02384-z

JEL Classification

D22 L25 O32 O36 O55

Key Words

Resource-constrained innovation

Knowledge sourcing

Inter-firm cooperation

Coactive learning

Africa

Related Topics

Africa

Companies

Emerging Markets & Developing Countries

Globalization

Innovation and Structural Change

International Trade

African innovators typically suffer from severe resource constraints and need to develop strategies to cope with these constraints. This paper focusses on external knowledge sourcing and, in particular, on the role of cooperation as a means to compensate for missing resources. Findings suggest that domestic inter-firm cooperation is of outstanding importance for firm-level innovation in Nigeria, whereas cooperation with other partners (research institutions, foreign firms, consultants, or the government) has no sizable impact on the innovative performance of Nigerian firms. Moreover, we show that it is in particular young firms and firms suffering from financial constraints that benefit from cooperation, whereas foreign-owned firms benefit less. Our findings contribute to a better understanding of the drivers of firm-level innovation in sub-Saharan Africa and have important implications for firm strategies and for innovation policy.

Kiel Institute Experts

  • Prof. Dr. Dirk Dohse
    Research Director
  • Sophia Fehrenbacher
    Kiel Institute Researcher

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