DOI: 10.1257/aeri.20220384 ISSN: 2640-205X
Global Innovation and Knowledge Diffusion
Nelson Lind, Natalia Ramondo- Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law
- Geography, Planning and Development
We develop a Ricardian model of trade where countries innovate ideas that diffuse globally. Our key result provides necessary and sufficient conditions for innovation and diffusion to generate max-stable Fréchet productivity, linking generalized extreme value expenditure to knowledge flows. Innovation makes a country technologically distinct, reducing its substitutability with other countries. In contrast, diffusion generates technological similarity, increasing head-to-head competition and substitutability. In an innovation-only model where countries do not share ideas, productivities are independent across countries and expenditure is CES. Consequently, departures from CES reveal diffusion patterns. (JEL F11, O31, O33, O41)