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In 2004, Canada changed the eligibility rules for its Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SRED) tax credit, which provides tax incentives for R&D conducted by small private firms. Difference-in-difference estimates show a 17 percent increase in total R&D among eligible firms. The impact was larger for firms that took the tax credits as refunds because they had no current tax liability. Contract R&D expenditures were more elastic than the R&D wage bill. The response was also greater for firms that invested in R&D capital before the policy change. (JEL D22, G32, H25, L25, O32, O38)
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Ajay Agrawal
National Bureau of Economic Research
Carlos Rosell
Boston University
Timothy Simcoe
Boston University
American Economic Journal Economic Policy
University of Toronto
Boston University
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Agrawal et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dce5aad111c0385b3597d4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1257/pol.20140467