Publication | Closed Access
Sequential innovation, patents, and imitation
730
Citations
54
References
2009
Year
Innovation EvaluationPatent ProsecutionSequential InnovationLawCorporate InnovationPatent AnalysisExperimental EconomicsPatent ProtectionProspective ProfitPatent PublicationPatent PoolIntellectual PropertyTechnology TransferEconomicsInnovation EconomicsPatent PolicySequential ModelTechnology LicensingInnovationPatent LawIntellectual Property PolicyBusinessInnovation PolicySocial InnovationTechnologyPatentability
We argue that when innovation is “sequential” (so that each successive invention builds in an essential way on its predecessors) and “complementary” (so that each potential innovator takes a different research line), patent protection is not as useful for encouraging innovation as in a static setting. Indeed, society and even inventors themselves may be better off without such protection. Furthermore, an inventor's prospective profit may actually be enhanced by competition and imitation. Our sequential model of innovation appears to explain evidence from a natural experiment in the software industry.
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