Sequential R\&D and blocking patents in the dynamics of growth
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Publication:2014732
DOI10.1007/S10887-013-9101-5zbMATH Open1290.91119OpenAlexW2124537167MaRDI QIDQ2014732FDOQ2014732
Authors: Guido Cozzi, Silvia Galli
Publication date: 16 June 2014
Published in: Journal of Economic Growth (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://doc.rero.ch/record/324868/files/10887_2013_Article_9101.pdf
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Macroeconomic theory (monetary models, models of taxation) (91B64) General equilibrium theory (91B50) Economic growth models (91B62)
Cites Work
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- Too much of a good thing? The economics of investment in R\&D
- Patents in a model of endogenous growth
- Basic research, openness, and convergence
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- Why Do New Technologies Complement Skills? Directed Technical Change and Wage Inequality
- Semi-endogenous versus Schumpeterian growth models: testing the knowledge production function using international data
- Endogenous vs exogenously driven fluctuations in vintage capital models
- Schumpeterian growth without scale effects
- The protection of intellectual property rights and endogenous growth: is stronger always better?
- Effects of blocking patents on R\&D: a quantitative DGE analysis
- The Management of Innovation
- The welfare cost of one-size-fits-all patent protection
- Inventing or spying? Implications for growth
- Ability-Biased Technological Transition, Wage Inequality, and Economic Growth
- Back to Basics: Basic Research Spillovers, Innovation Policy, and Growth
Cited In (11)
- Dynamic effects of patent policy on innovation and inequality in a Schumpeterian economy
- Hierarchical growth: basic and applied research
- Economies of scale in innovations with block-busters
- Effects of blocking patents on R\&D: a quantitative DGE analysis
- Prizes for basic research: human capital, economic might and the shadow of history
- Growth and welfare effects of intellectual property rights when consumers differ in income
- Endogenous growth and multiplicity due to finite patents' lifetime
- Should the government protect its basic research?
- Talent, basic research and growth
- Effects of patent policy on growth and inequality: exogenous versus endogenous quality improvements
- Rent protection as a barrier to innovation and growth
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