In this exciting work, Link and Scott summarize more than a decade of
their research on public support of R&D in small, entrepreneurial firms,
concluding public R&D investments, primarily funded by the U.S. Small
Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program, are indeed bending the arc
of innovation. Firms that receive SBIR project funding would not
undertake the projects in the absence of SBIR's support. SBIR support
has had a positive impact on the employment trajectory of firms and
their ability to commercialize innovations. Bending the Arc of
Innovation offers a theoretical model of the effects of the SBIR
program. Link and Scott demonstrate that with SBIR support of R&D often
comes contractual commercial agreements with other firms to sell the
rights to the technology generated by the public support. These
agreements between another firm and a small firm with a SBIR-award
enable an effective transfer of knowledge created with the small firm's
publicly-supported research. Both parties to the agreement have better
access to the knowledge resources of the other. Link and Scott show how
these agreements allow the dedication of resources and organizational
efforts necessary for the commercially successful access to and use of
external knowledge.