publ-ohne-podpubl-ohne-podDegner, Harald2024-04-082024-04-082010-03-222010https://hohpublica.uni-hohenheim.de/handle/123456789/5325Many papers have been written about the effect of firm size on innovativeness, revealing a positive, a negative or a mixed impact. To this day, the so-called Schumpeterian hypothesis of the above-average innovativeness of large firms has been neither confirmed nor rejected, often because of insufficient data or a too-short observation period. Many studies concentrate only on a specific region or a specific sector, or they analyze a very short time period. Windows of technological opportunities, providing technological booms for both firms and sectors, have not yet been investigated. An analysis of Germany?s chemical, metal and electronic-engineering sectors between 1877 and 1932 reveals that the sector-specific long-term relationship between firm size and innovativeness is negative, except during times of specific technological booms. In combination with firm-specific characteristics, this new aspect can contribute to a better understanding of the long-term relationship between firm size and innovativeness.engEffect of firm size on innovativenessTechnological boomSchumpeterian hypothesis330InnovationUnternehmensgrößeTechnischer FortschrittSchumpeterJoseph AloisKonjunkturaufschwungWindows of technological opportunity : do technological booms influence the relationship between firm size and innovativeness?WorkingPaper32169502Xurn:nbn:de:bsz:100-opus-4399