Abstracts

Stochastic control model for R&D race in a mixed duopoly with spillovers and knowledge stocks
Jingjing Wang (The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Hong Kong)
Joint work with Yue Kuen Kwok and Chi Man Leung

Thursday June 5, 16:00-16:30 | session P6 | Poster session | room lobby

We consider the stochastic control model with finite time horizon for a mixed duopoly R&D (Research and Development) race between the profit-maximizing private firm and welfare maximizing public firm. In our two-firm stochastic control R&D race model, the stochastic control variable is taken to be the private firm’s rate of R&D expenditure and the hazard rate of success of innovation has dependence on the R&D effort and knowledge stock. Given the fixed R&D effort of the public firm, the optimal control is determined so as to maximize the private firm’s value function subject to market uncertainty arising from the stochastic profit flow of the new innovative product. Our R&D race model also incorporates the impact of input and output spillovers. We apply the Bellman optimality condition to construct the Hamilton-Jacobi-Bellman equation of the stochastic control model. Finite difference schemes together with policy iteration procedure are constructed for the numerical solution of the value function and optimal control of R&D expenditure of the private firm. We conduct various sensitivity tests with varying model parameters to analyze the effects of input spillover, output spillover and knowledge stock on the optimal control policy and the value function of the profit-maximizing private firm. The R&D effort of the private firm is found to increase when the profit flow rate increases. Moreover, the optimal R&D effort level may decrease with increasing private firm’s knowledge stock and output spillover. The effects of input spillover on the optimal control policy and value function are seen to be relatively small. We examine the robustness of various observed phenomena of the two-firm R&D race with varying values of the fixed R&D effort of the public firm. With regard to public policy issue, we examine the level of the fixed public firm’s R&D effort so that social welfare is maximized.