Patent policy, patent pools, and the accumulation of claims in sequential innovation
DOI10.1007/S00199-010-0591-5zbMATH Open1246.91104OpenAlexW2138133101MaRDI QIDQ447537FDOQ447537
Authors: Gastón Llanes, Stefano Trento
Publication date: 4 September 2012
Published in: Economic Theory (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://ddd.uab.cat/record/71431
Recommendations
double marginalizationanticommonscomplementary monopolypatent policypatent poolssequential innovation
Macroeconomic theory (monetary models, models of taxation) (91B64) Economic models of real-world systems (e.g., electricity markets, etc.) (91B74) Trade models (91B60)
Cites Work
Cited In (15)
- Optimal patent policy in the presence of vertical separation
- Shared patent rights and technological progress
- On the social desirability of patents for sequential innovations in a vertically differentiated market
- Elementary results on solutions to the Bellman equation of dynamic programming: existence, uniqueness, and convergence
- Sequential R\&D and blocking patents in the dynamics of growth
- Adverse effects of patent pooling on product development and commercialization
- A Schumpeterian growth model with random quality improvements
- Patent litigation and cross licensing with cumulative innovation
- Patent package structures and sharing rules for royalty revenue
- Mergers of complements, endogenous product differentiation and welfare
- Optimal patent licensing: from three to two part tariffs
- Optimal patent policy, research joint ventures, and growth
- Patent portfolios and firms' technological choices
- Optimal formation rules for patent pools
- On the Performance of Patents
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