This paper addresses the effects of a stronger patent system in developing countries on the quality of transferred technology and welfare. We show that a stronger patent system can reduce the quality of licensed technology. The presence of technology licensing may encourage the developing country to adopt a stronger patent system compared with the situation where licensing is not an option.School of Accounting and Financ
260-274The exploitation of technological knowledge is central to the development process. Less devel...
This paper evaluates the welfare consequences of implementing intellectual property rights in develo...
This paper provides an empirical analysis of the extent to which stronger intellectual property righ...
This paper addresses the effects of a stronger patent system in developing countries on the quality ...
In this paper, the influence of stronger intellectual property protection on technology transfer int...
This paper examines the proportion of patents issued to residents in developed and developing countr...
In this paper we study the influence of stronger intellectual property protection on technology tran...
This paper reviews briefly the economic case for uniform and strong intellectual property rights (IP...
This paper examines long-run effects of intellectual property rights (IPRs) protec-tion and industri...
It might appear that intellectual property protection has a positive impact on a country\u27s econom...
This paper investigates whether, in what direction, and to what extent one mode of technology transf...
This paper studies the incentives that developing countries have to enforce in-tellectual properties...
This thesis analyses whether intellectual property rights promote or restrain technology transfer to...
We develop a model to analyze one mechanism under which stronger intellectual property rights (IPR) ...
This chapter broadly summarizes some of the basic economic theory on the working of the patent syste...
260-274The exploitation of technological knowledge is central to the development process. Less devel...
This paper evaluates the welfare consequences of implementing intellectual property rights in develo...
This paper provides an empirical analysis of the extent to which stronger intellectual property righ...
This paper addresses the effects of a stronger patent system in developing countries on the quality ...
In this paper, the influence of stronger intellectual property protection on technology transfer int...
This paper examines the proportion of patents issued to residents in developed and developing countr...
In this paper we study the influence of stronger intellectual property protection on technology tran...
This paper reviews briefly the economic case for uniform and strong intellectual property rights (IP...
This paper examines long-run effects of intellectual property rights (IPRs) protec-tion and industri...
It might appear that intellectual property protection has a positive impact on a country\u27s econom...
This paper investigates whether, in what direction, and to what extent one mode of technology transf...
This paper studies the incentives that developing countries have to enforce in-tellectual properties...
This thesis analyses whether intellectual property rights promote or restrain technology transfer to...
We develop a model to analyze one mechanism under which stronger intellectual property rights (IPR) ...
This chapter broadly summarizes some of the basic economic theory on the working of the patent syste...
260-274The exploitation of technological knowledge is central to the development process. Less devel...
This paper evaluates the welfare consequences of implementing intellectual property rights in develo...
This paper provides an empirical analysis of the extent to which stronger intellectual property righ...