intellectual property
Welfare Effects of Intellectual Property in a North-South Model of Endogenous Growth with Comparative Advantage
The paper develops a model for analysing the costs and benefits of intellectual property enforcement in LDCs. The North is more productive than the South and is the only source of innovator.
International Spillovers and Absorptive Capacity: A Cross-country, Cross-sector Analysis Based on European Patents and Citations
The paper provides an empirical assessment of the effect of national and international knowledge spillovers on innovation at a finely defined sectoral level for six major industrialised countries over the period 1981-1995.
Factors Affecting the Power of Patent Rights
The authors identify three policy instruments governments have at their disposal to affect the power of patent rights to prevent imitation. They develop a simple framework to analyse the effects of changing these policy instruments on ex ante investment in invention in the light of recent concerns about the potential effects of socially undesirable patents.
Importance of Accessibility to R&D on Patent Production in Swedish Municipalities
The main purpose in this paper is to study to what extent accessibility to research and development (R&D) can explain patent production. Results indicate that high accessibility (local) to company R&D has the greatest effect on patent production.
Patent Protection As A Stimulant for Risky Innovation: Could TRIPS be Counterproductive?
The paper introduces the idea that strong patent protection can lead innovators to rest on their laurels, into a simple tournament based framework. Concentrating on optimal patent protection, the model shows that there is a positive relationship between the ability of the economy (firm) to innovate and how strong patent protection should be.
When Does Patent Protection Stimulate Innovation?
The paper argues that although patents act as an incentive to innovate, they also can lead the patent holder to rest on his laurels and at the same time discourage some innovators from innovating, reducing knowledge spillovers.
Institutions and Technological Innovation During the Early Economic
Growth: Evidence from the Great Inventors of the United States, 1790-1930
Employing a sample of renowned U.S. inventors that combines biographical detail with information on the patents they received over their careers, the authors highlight the impact of early U.S. patent institutions in providing broad access to economic opportunity and in encouraging trade in new technological knowledge.
Business Method Patents in Europe and their Strategic Use: Evidence from Franking Device Manufacturers
The paper investigates the legal framework set by patent laws with respect to the patentability of business methods, contrasting the situation in Europe and the situation in the U.S. It is shown that in praxi business methods have never been excluded from patentability in Europe.
Innovation, Inequality and Intellectual Property Rights
The existing literature on the sources and nature of productivity growth during the early industrialization stages of U.S. has identified the combination of intellectual property rights (IPRs) with a large middle class and broad participation in markets as explanations for the extraordinary level and growth of patenting. The paper considers whether these factors could play a role in the contemporaneous evolution of innovation in a broad cross section of countries today.
Sectoral Knowledge Production in Swedish Regions 1993-1999
The paper attempts to explain knowledge production in Swedish functional regions as measured by the number of patent applications. Results show that the patent stock of a region contains much of the information needed in order to explain current patenting activity.