Publication | Open Access
Regulating Innovation with Uncertain Quality: Information, Risk, and Access in Medical Devices
49
Citations
40
References
2019
Year
LawOligopoly EquilibriumBarrier To EntryHealthcare InnovationSearch CostsEconomic AnalysisRegulatory ConsiderationIntellectual PropertyAntitrust EnforcementConsumer ProtectionPatentabilityTechnology TransferQuality Information RequirementsEconomicsPublic PolicyHealth PolicyConsumer WelfareRegulatory EconomicsInnovationEconomic PolicyCompetition PolicyBusinessTherapeutic PatentInnovation PolicyUncertain QualityTechnologyMedical DevicesRegulation
We study the impact of regulating product entry and quality information requirements on an oligopoly equilibrium and consumer welfare. Product testing can reduce consumer uncertainty, but also increase entry costs and delay entry. Using variation between EU and US medical device regulations, we document patterns consistent with valuable learning from more stringent US requirements. To derive welfare implications, we pair the data with a model of supply, demand, and testing regulation. US policy is indistinguishable from the policy that maximizes total surplus in our estimated model, while the European Union could benefit from more testing. “Post-market surveillance” could further increase surplus. (JEL D43, I18, L13, L51, L64, O31, O38)
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1