Title: IPR and Innovation
1IPR and Innovation
- Ashish Arora
- Heinz School,
- Carnegie Mellon University
2IPR and Innovation
- Socially efficient level of RD (conditional on
existing firms) - Efficient allocation of RD input
- Commercialization
- Cumulative innovation and dynamics
- Institutions of knowledge generation
3Socially efficient level of RD
- Incentives to innovate what is the role of
patents - Patents less important than other first mover
advantage and commercialization capabilities
(e.g., Yale, CMU surveys) - Median patent of low value patent renewal
studies (e.g., Pakes, Schankerman) 25 ESR - But average value of patents may be significantly
higher (e.g., Gambardella et al.)
4Patent Premium, selected industries
- Patents not used for a majority of innovations in
the vast majority of industries - Patent protection is valuable in all industries,
even in industries that do not patent much.
Source Arora, Ceccagnoli and Cohen, RD and the
Patent Premium, NBER, 2004
5Patents provides significant incentives for
RDElasticity w.r.t patent premium
Source Arora, Ceccagnoli and Cohen, RD and the
Patent Premium, NBER, 2004
6Efficient allocation of RD effort
- Entry mixed evidence
- Interaction between IPR and market power retard
entry (e.g., MSFT) - French org. chemical industry destroyed by
excessively broad patents. - Patents used to coordinate cartels in chemicals
in pre WWII - Patents by non producers promotes entry in
chemicals (Lieberman) - Patents promote vertical specialization
- Pharma firms increasingly focusing on marketing
rather than RD - Patents (and IPR broadly) may also be used to
prevent vertical entry (e.g., software)
7Commercialization Patent Protection and
Licensing Mixed Evidence
- No Effect?
- Other studies cast doubts on the link between
patent strength and the extent or form of
international technology licensing - Fink (WP, 1997), using German data
- Fosfuri (WP, 2003) in the chemical sector
- Cassiman and Veugelers (2002) do not find that
the patent strength encourages Belgian firms to
enter into collaborative RD arrangements. - Branstetter, Fisman, and Foley (NBER WP, 2002),
using US data, find no evidence of an increase of
technology licensing to unaffiliated parties for
countries that strengthened patent protection.
(But they see an increase in transfer to
affiliate.)
- Find positive effect
- Gans, Hsu, and Stern (RJE,2002) presence of
patent increases the likelihood that startup
licenses to an incumbent rather than enter
commercializing - Yang and Maskus (W.P., 2000) positive
relationship between IPRs regimes and licensing
by U.S. MNCs. - Nagaoka (WP, 2002) using data for Japanese
firms, find weak patent regimes associated with
an greater fraction of transfers to an affiliate
rather than unaffiliated firm - Smith (JIE, 2001) US firms more likely to export
or directly manufacture rather than license
technology in countries with weak patent regimes.
Impact of patents on licensing conditioned by
presence of complementary capabilities
810 Change in Patent Effectiveness Leads to
Source Arora Ceccagnoli Patenting and
Licensing, Management Science, forthcoming
9Dynamics
- Cumulative innovation (e.g., Scotchmer, Green and
Scotchmer, Merges and Nelson) - Biotech produces anecdotal evidence of problems
- BRCA Myriad
- Stem Cells and Geron
- Murray Stern Sampat
- Anticommons (Heller and Eisenberg)
- Empirical basis weak (e.g., Walsh et al, 2004 for
commercial research and Walsh et al. 2005 for
large sample academic research) - Problem may arise in future with full genome
screening and gene chips
10Institutions Biggest problem area
- Major threat to non market based institutions
(e.g., David Gambardella and Hall) - Many (all?) of biomed problem patent in US are
university / non profit based patents - BRCA Univ of Utah
- Stem Cells Wisconsin
- Canavan Miami
- Oncomouse Harvard