In this paper we examine the effect of innovation on job creation and job
destruction in Spanish manufacturing. Our empirical analysis is based on
firm-level longitudinal data from which we have information on employment
and innovation activity. The estimation approach consists of a two-step
procedure that takes into account the fact that firms endogenously choose
positive, negative or zero growth in employment, in which the selection
mechanism is an ordered probit. Our results point out the importance of
innovation variables on employment growth: innovative firms create more jobs
-and destroy fewer- than non-innovative, and the degree of technological
effort has a strong positive effect on net employment creation.