Working Paper

ICT, Collaboration, and Science-Based Innovation: Evidence from BITNET

Kathrin Wernsdorf, Markus Nagler, Martin Watzinger
CESifo, Munich, 2020

CESifo Working Paper No. 8646

Does access to information and communication technologies (ICT) increase innovation? We examine this question by exploiting the staggered adoption of BITNET across U.S. universities in the 1980s. BITNET, an early version of the Internet, enabled e-mail-based knowledge exchange and collaboration among academics. After the adoption of BITNET, university-connected inventors increase patenting substantially. The effects are driven by collaborative patents by new inventor teams. The patents induced by ICT are exclusively science-related and stem from fields where knowledge can be codified easily. In contrast, we neither find an effect on patents not building on science nor on inventors unconnected to universities.

CESifo Category
Industrial Organisation
Economics of Digitization
Keywords: ICT, communication, knowledge diffusion, science-based innovation, university-patenting
JEL Classification: H540, L230, L860, O300, O320, O330