Sequential Innovation, Patents, And Imitation
Preprint
- 1 January 2000
- preprint
- Published by Elsevier in SSRN Electronic Journal
Abstract
How could such industries as software, semiconductors, and computers have been so innovative despite historically weak patent protection? We argue that if innovation is both sequential and complementary--as it certainly has been in those industries--competition can increase firms' future profits thus offsetting short-term dissipation of rents. A simple model also shows that in such a dynamic industry, patent protection may reduce overall innovation and social welfare. The natural experiment that occurred when patent protection was extended to software in the 1980?s provides a test of this model. Standard arguments would predict that R&D intensity and productivity should have increased among patenting firms. Consistent with our model, however, these increases did not occur. Other evidence supporting our model includes a distinctive pattern of cross-licensing in these industries and a positive relationship between rates of innovation and firm entry.Keywords
This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- R&D spillovers, patents and the incentives to innovate in Japan and the United StatesResearch Policy, 2002
- The NBER Manufacturing Productivity DatabasePublished by National Bureau of Economic Research ,1996
- Medical serviceRBM-News, 1995
- Patent Scope, Antitrust Policy, and Cumulative InnovationThe RAND Journal of Economics, 1995
- Cross licensing of complementary technologiesInternational Journal of Industrial Organization, 1992
- Property Rights, Progress, and the Aircraft Patent AgreementThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1988
- The Simple Economics of Research PortfoliosThe Economic Journal, 1987
- Econometric models based on count data. Comparisons and applications of some estimators and testsJournal of Applied Econometrics, 1986
- Uncertainty, Industrial Structure, and the Speed of R&DThe Bell Journal of Economics, 1980
- Economic Welfare and the Allocation of Resources for InventionPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1962