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Innovation, Intellectual Property Rights, and Economic Development: A Unified Empirical Investigation

John Hudson and Alexandru Minea

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Abstract: Two important strands of literature investigate the way the effect of intellectual property rights (IPR) on innovation depends on either the initial IPR level or the level of economic development. We expand on this by studying their joint effect, in a single, unified, empirical framework. We find that the effect of IPR on innovation is more complex than previously thought, displaying important nonlinearities depending on the initial levels of both IPR and per capita GDP. The policy implications of this are examined and include the conclusion that a single global level of IPR is in general sub-optimal.

Keywords: intellectual property rights; innovation; economic development; nonlinearities (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2013
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (52)

Published in World Development, 2013, 46, pp.66-78

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