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SR&ED Report: Evaluating the Impact of R&D Tax Credits on Innovation (2004)

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In 2004, the study “Evaluating the Impact of R&D Tax Credits on Innovation: A Microeconometric Study on Canadian Firms” was published. The report analyzed the impact of Research & Development (R&D) tax credits—such as the Scientific Research & Experimental Development (SR&ED) tax credit—on innovation activities of Canadian firms. The study found that R&D tax credits have a positive impact on the firm’s decision to conduct R&D and increase innovation output of the recipient firms.

Evaluating SR&ED Study Findings

In the study, the authors point out that Canada has one of the most generous R&D incentive programs in the world, noting the impact of the SR&ED tax credit.

“The programme was rated as the most important component in the system of government support of R&D followed by refundability of the federal credit,” they said, “while government grants and contracts received the lowest rating.”

Citing statistics from a 1998 Finance Canada study, the authors also point out the incredible growth of the program. Between 1988-1992, eligible SR&ED expenditures had grown “50 per cent from $4.5 billion in 1988 to $6.9 billion in 1992” for corporations and “by 100 per cent from $0.7 billion in 1988 to $1.4 billion in 1992” for smaller CCPCs.

Drawing SR&ED Conclusions

The study concluded that R&D tax credits—and SR&ED in particular—had  “a positive impact on innovation output of the recipient firms.”

“Tax credit recipients realize a higher number of product innovations, as well as sales with such,” they said. “Consequently, we can conclude that firms conduct more R&D if they receive tax credits.”

While commercialization isn’t the end goal of SR&ED, the authors also noted that R&D innovations resulting from tax credits led to products the performed well in the Canadian market.

“As the sales with innovative products increase, it turns out that the induced increase in R&D inputs is translated to innovations which are positively evaluated by the market,” they said.

This article is based upon a report issued at the time: “Evaluating the Impact of R&D Tax Credits on Innovation: A Microeconometric Study on Canadian Firms”.

 

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Elizabeth Lance

Elizabeth is known as the "SR&ED Maven" in the industry. With a love of documentation and the nuances of language, she is often engaged by multi-million dollar companies to help improve documentation and workflow processes. Her favourite sentence (which she hears regularly) is "Accepted as Filed". Find out more about her on LinkedIn.

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