intellectual property
Social and Technological Efficiency of Patent Systems
The paper develops an evolutionary model of
industry dynamics in order to carry out a richer theoretical analysis of the consequences of a stronger patent system. The first results obtained in the paper are rather consistent with the anti-patent
arguments and they do not favour the case for a stronger patent system.
Exploring the Patent Explosion
The paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research looks more closely at the sources of patent growth in the United States since 1984. It confirms that the increase is largely due to U.S. patenters, with an earlier surge in Asia, and some increase in Europe.
Commercialization of Patents and External Financing during the R&D Phase
Using a unique database on individual Swedish patents, a survival model estimates how different factors influence the time it takes until commercialization starts.
Intellectual Property Rights and Innovation in Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises
According to the report, the rise of the knowledge economy is evidenced by the growth in the knowledge-based industrial and service sectors, which are growing faster than GDP, and thus increasing their share in the overall economy. Despite the economic slowdown in recent years, the knowledge intensity of Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development economies continues to increase and private sector investments in R&D continues to rise.
Strenghtening Intellectual Property Rights: Experience From the 1986 Taiwanese Patent Reforms
According to the author, the evidence on the number of patents awarded to Taiwanese inventors as well as that on research and development (R&D) spending in Taiwan suggests that the reforms stimulated additional inventive activity, especially in industries where patent protection is generally regarded as an effective strategy for extracting returns, and in industries which are more R&D intensive.
To Disclose or Not to Disclose: Cheap Talk with Uncertain Biases
The author studies strategic information transmission when biases are uncertain and demonstrates that it never benefits the decision maker or the expert to have the bias of the expert disclosed.
Appropriability and the Timing of Innovation: Evidence From MIT Inventions
The authors find that increased appropriability, as measured by Lerners index of patent scope and effectiveness of patents in a line of business, decrease the hazard of termination and increase the hazard of first sale.
Appropriability and the Timing of Innovation: Evidence from MIT Inventions
The authors find that increased appropriability, as measured by Lerners index of patent scope and effectiveness of patents in a line of business, decrease the hazard of termination and increase the hazard of first sale.
Intellectual Property Rights, Licensing, and Innovation
The paper develops a theoretical model in which firms in the North (developed nations) innovate products of higher quality levels and decide whether to produce in the North or transfer production rights to the South (developing nations) through licensing.
Valuable Patents
The authors attempt to figure out what makes a patent valuable and how to identify them. They examine data on every patent issued between 1963-1999 to compare characteristics of litigated patents with general patents.