Do non-competition agreements lead firms to pursue risky R&D projects?

Raffaele Conti*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

Non-competition agreements are contracts signed by employees and firms that prohibit employees from joining or forming a rival company after splitting from the firm. Stricter enforcement of such contracts may induce firms to undertake riskier R&D projects, leading to technological breakthroughs or dead ends. Specifically, non-competition agreements reduce the risk that the firm loses the fruits of inventive activity by its employees, such that when the enforcement of non-compete covenants is stricter, firms grant corporate inventors more freedom to explore risky but high-potential research paths. This study uses data about U.S. patent applications between 1990 and 2000 to identify the impact of non-competition agreements and considers both cross-state and longitudinal variation in the enforcement of non-compete clauses. The empirical findings are mainly consistent with theory and show that in states with stricter enforcement, companies are more likely to undertake risky and potentially path-breaking R&D projects than in states that do not enforce non-compete agreements as strictly.

Original languageEnglish
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2011
Externally publishedYes
Event71st Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management - West Meets East: Enlightening, Balancing, Transcending, AOM 2011 - San Antonio, TX, United States
Duration: 12 Aug 201116 Aug 2011

Conference

Conference71st Annual Meeting of the Academy of Management - West Meets East: Enlightening, Balancing, Transcending, AOM 2011
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CitySan Antonio, TX
Period12/08/1116/08/11

Keywords

  • Breakthrough
  • Non-competes
  • R&D strategies

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