Abstract
This paper explores a new role for venture capitalists, as knowledge intermediaries. A venture capital investor can communicate valuable knowledge to an entrepreneur, facilitating innovation. The venture capitalist can also communicate the entrepreneur's innovative knowledge to other portfolio companies. We study the costs and benefits of these two forms of knowledge transfer, and their implications for investment, innovation, and product market competition. The model also sheds light on the choice between venture capital and other forms of finance, and the determinants of the decision to seek patent protection for innovations. Our analysis provides a rationale for the use of contingencies (specifically, patent approval) in VC contracts documented by Kaplan and Stromberg (2003), and for recent evidence on patterns of syndication among venture capitalists.
Keywords
venture capital; knowledge intermediaries; contracts; innovation; competition; patents;
JEL codes
- D82: Asymmetric and Private Information • Mechanism Design
- D86: Economics of Contract: Theory
- G24: Investment Banking • Venture Capital • Brokerage • Ratings and Ratings Agencies
- L22: Firm Organization and Market Structure
Reference
Roberta Dessi, and Nina Yin, “Venture Capital and Knowledge Transfer”, TSE Working Paper, n. 15-555, February 2015.
See also
Published in
TSE Working Paper, n. 15-555, February 2015