← All articles

Photo · Gordon More

Do government incentives increase indigenous innovation commercialisation? Empirical evidence from local Ghanaian firms

Harrison Paul Adjimah, Victor Atiase, Dennis Yao Dzansi · 2023 · International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour & Research

Summary. Government incentives affect indigenous innovation commercialisation differently in Ghana's small-scale industry. Supply-side incentives increase employment but not sales or profits. Demand-side incentives to buyers significantly boost sales, profitability, and employment, and strengthen the positive effects of market factors. The study recommends shifting innovation support toward demand-side strategies in low-income economies.

Read the original

Cite this article

Adjimah, H. P., Atiase, V., & Dzansi, D. Y.. (2023). Do government incentives increase indigenous innovation commercialisation? Empirical evidence from local Ghanaian firms. International Journal of Entrepreneurial Behaviour & Research. https://doi.org/10.1108/ijebr-02-2022-0157

Details

DOI
10.1108/ijebr-02-2022-0157
Countries
Ghana
Regions
Africa
Categories
indigenous-innovation, policy, entrepreneurship
Added
2026-04-28