Do We Need to Protect Intellectual Property Rights?
Vladimir Popov
Journal of the New Economic Association, 2011, issue 11, 107-126
Abstract:
Strict protection of IPR can have a negative effect on economic development. Regression of economic growth on these indices produces conventional results (positive effect of stricter protection of IPR on growth) only if indices of institutional capacity (government effectiveness, control over corruption) are not included into the right hand side. If they are included, they kill the effect of IPR protection (because they are very much correlated with the IPR protection indices), so it is hardly possible to separate the effects of stricter IPR protection from the impact of the general strength of institutions. The same procedure was used to evaluate the impact of the IPR protection regime on the average share of R&D expenditure in GDP and the results were largely the same: without control for the institutional capacity, IPR protection seems to stimulate R&D, but after controlling for the institutional indices the effect disappears. There is also a strong negative effect of stricter regime of protection of IPR on the proliferation of the most crucial technology of recent decades – computers. The increase in the total number of PCs in 1995-2005, after controlling for the level of development, the size of the country and the institutional index, is negatively correlated with the IPR protection index.
Keywords: intellectual property rights; piracy; economic growth; institutions (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: O34 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2011
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Working Paper: Do We Need to Protect Intellectual Property Rights? (2010) 
Working Paper: Do We Need to Protect Intellectual Property Rights? (2010) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:nea:journl:y:2011:i:11:p:107-126
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