Fr. 136.00

The Economics of Innovation and Intellectual Property

English · Hardback

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Description

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This textbook introduces readers to the economics of innovation, covering innovation basics, the measurement of returns to innovation for individuals and the economy, and the use of intellectual property protection by innovators. The book focuses on the various ways patents have been used by industry to secure returns to innovation, as well as the strategic use of patents, and it emphasizes present-day technologies, such as pharmaceuticals and AI. Clearly organized and highly readable, the text offers a useful introduction to economics, business, public policy, and legal studies, and provides a comprehensive collection of references and information from a variety of sources across disciplines.

List of contents










  • List of Illustrations

  • Preface

  • Acknowledgements

  • How to Use This Book

  • I. Innovation

  • 1: Innovation and Intellectual Property

  • 2: What Is Innovation?

  • 3: Supply and Demand for Innovation

  • 4: Appropriation Mechanisms

  • 5: Innovation and Competition in Firms

  • 6: Returns to RandD and Innovation

  • 7: Diffusion

  • 8: Innovation Strategy

  • 9: Innovation and Economic Growth

  • 10: Innovation Policy

  • II: Intellectual Property Rights and Their Use

  • 11: Patents, Utility Models, Design Rights, and Plant Breeder Rights

  • 12: Trademarks and Brands

  • 13: Copyright

  • 14: Alternatives to Intellectual Property

  • III: The Patent System

  • 15: Intellectual Property Rights and Economic Development

  • 16: Patents and Pharmaceuticals

  • 17: Software, Business Methods, Open Source, and Artificial Intelligence

  • 18: Strategic Patenting, Patent Portfolio Races, and Patent Thickets

  • 19: Patent Litigation and Enforcement

  • 20: The Sharing and Exchange of Patents

  • 21: Technology Standards and Standard Essential Patents

  • 22: Patent Trolls

  • IV: Appendices

  • A: Mathematics and Statistics

  • B: List of Abbreviations

  • C: Data

  • Bibliography

  • Index



About the author

Bronwyn H. Hall is Professor of Economics Emerita at the University of California at Berkeley, Visiting Professor at MPI-Munich, and a Research Associate at the NBER, IFS-London, and the Innovation Lab, College de France. She received the 2024 Award of the Distinguished Fellow granted by the American Economic Association. She has published numerous articles on the economics and econometrics of technical change and innovation and is the editor of the Handbook of the Economics of Innovation in the Elsevier series of economic handbooks. Her research includes analysis of the use of intellectual property systems in developed and developing countries, the valuation of intangible (knowledge) assets, comparative firm-level R&D investment and innovation studies, measuring the returns to R&D and innovation, and analysis of such technology policies as R&D subsidies and tax incentives.

Christian Helmers is Professor of Economics at the Leavey School of Business at Santa Clara University and

Visiting Professor at KU Leuven. His research focuses on innovation and intellectual property. Before joining Santa Clara, he was an assistant professor at Universidad Carlos III, Madrid. Prior to that, he worked as a research economist at the London School of Economics.

Summary

The first comprehensive textbook covering all aspects of the economics of innovation and the role of intellectual property in encouraging or discouraging innovation.

Innovation is widely viewed as the engine behind economic growth, and it has assumed increasing importance in contemporary economic research. In The Economics of Innovation and Intellectual Property, Bronwyn H. Hall and Christian Helmers introduce readers to the use of economic analysis for the understanding of technical change and the innovative process, its determinants, and consequences.

The authors cover innovation basics, the measurement of returns to innovation for individuals and the economy, and the use of intellectual property protection by innovators. They focus on the various ways patents have been used by industry to secure returns to innovation, as well as the strategic use of patents, and they emphasize present-day technologies including pharmaceuticals, software, and AI.

Clearly organized and accessible, The Economics of Innovation and Intellectual Property offers a useful introduction to economics, business, public policy, and legal studies, and provides a comprehensive collection of references and information from a variety of sources across disciplines. It also includes various boxes with definitions and examples, as well as a brief mathematical appendix explaining concepts that may be unfamiliar and an introduction to data sources.

Additional text

With the publication of The Economics of Innovation and Intellectual Property, Hall and Helmers have produced an extraordinarily comprehensive, rigorous and deeply thoughtful volume. This impressive text now makes the learning of more than six decades of theoretical and empirical economics in this important subfield readily available to advanced undergraduate and graduate economics students interested in innovation and technological change.

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