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Patents, Research Exemption, and the Incentive for Sequential Innovation

GianCarlo Moschini and Oleg Yerokhin

Staff General Research Papers Archive from Iowa State University, Department of Economics

Abstract: We develop a dynamic duopoly model of R&D competition to improve the quality of a final good. The innovation process is sequential and cumulative, and takes place alongside production in an infinite-horizon setting. In this context we study the R&D incentive impacts resulting from a モresearch exemptionヤ or モexperimental useヤ provision. We specify and solve the innovation and production model under two distinct intellectual property right (IPR) regimes, essentially a patent system with and without a research exemption. The model applies closely to the question of the optimal mode of IPR protection for plants, where traditional plant breederメs rights allow for a well-defined research exemption, whereas standard utility patents do not. We characterize the properties of the relevant Markov perfect equilibria and investigate the profit and welfare effects of the research exemption. We find that firms, ex ante, always prefer full patent protection. The welfare ranking of the two IPR regimes, on the other hand, depends on the relative magnitudes of the costs of initial innovation and improvements. In particular, a research exemption is most likely to provide inadequate R&D incentives when there is a large cost to establish the initial research program.

Date: 2008-01-01
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-com, nep-ino and nep-mic
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (24)

Published in Journal of Economics & Management Strategy 2008, vol. 17, pp. 379-412

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