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Economic Growth with Imperfect Protection of Intellectual Property Rights
- Publication Year :
- 2005
-
Abstract
- This paper examines the growth effects of intellectual property right (IPR) protection in a quality-ladder model of endogenous growth. Stronger IPR protection, which reduces the imitation probability, increases the reward for innovation. However, stronger protection also gradually reduces the number of competitive sectors, in which innovation is easier than in monopolistic sectors. With free entry to R&D, the number of researchers in each remaining competitive sector increases, but the concentration of R&D activity raises the possibility of unnecessary duplication of innovation, thereby hindering growth. Consequently, imperfect rather than perfect protection maximizes growth. Welfare and scale effects are also examined.
- Subjects :
- Economics and Econometrics
Endogenous growth theory
intellectual property rights, endogenous growth, quality ladder, imitation, leapfrogging, duplication
Field (Bourdieu)
media_common.quotation_subject
Intellectual property
General Business, Management and Accounting
Microeconomics
jel:O31
Monopolistic competition
jel:O41
jel:O34
medicine
Economics
Imperfect
Free entry
medicine.symptom
Leapfrogging
Imitation
Welfare
Public finance
media_common
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6b7ae816c54f70084a26d79e5c0c0f42