This study develops an R&D-based growth model with basic and applied research to analyze the growth and welfare effects of two patent instruments (a) the patentability of basic R&D and (b) the division of profi�t between basic and applied researchers. We �find that for the purpose of stimulating basic R&D and economic growth simultaneously, increasing the share of profi�t assigned to basic researchers is more effective than raising the patentability of basic R&D, which has either a negative effect or an inverted-U effect on technological progress. Nonetheless, a benevolent patent authority requires both patent instruments to achieve the socially optimal allocation in the decentralized economy
The literature on R&D-driven economic growth suggests that technological innovations result from ent...
This survey provides a selective review of the literature on patent policy, innovation and economic ...
I develop a general equilibrium model of endogenous growth to jointly analyze two distinct theories ...
This study develops an R&D-based growth model with basic and applied research to analyze the growth ...
This study develops an R&D-based growth model with basic and applied research to analyze the growth ...
The incentives to conduct basic or applied research play a central role for economic growth. How doe...
This study explores the different implications of patent breadth and R&D subsidies on economic growt...
This study explores the different implications of patent breadth and R&D subsidies on economic growt...
Basic research is mainly performed publicly. Yet in the US public research findings were not patenta...
This study provides a growth-theoretic analysis on the effects of intellectual property rights on th...
In this note, we explore the different implications of patent breadth and R&D subsidies on economic ...
AbstractThis study provides a growth-theoretic analysis of the effects of intellectual property righ...
This study provides a growth-theoretic analysis on the effects of intellectual property rights on th...
This paper presents a growth model that can explain the coexistence of intellectual property rights ...
This paper explains growth of labour productivity through (inter)national spillovers from R&D an...
The literature on R&D-driven economic growth suggests that technological innovations result from ent...
This survey provides a selective review of the literature on patent policy, innovation and economic ...
I develop a general equilibrium model of endogenous growth to jointly analyze two distinct theories ...
This study develops an R&D-based growth model with basic and applied research to analyze the growth ...
This study develops an R&D-based growth model with basic and applied research to analyze the growth ...
The incentives to conduct basic or applied research play a central role for economic growth. How doe...
This study explores the different implications of patent breadth and R&D subsidies on economic growt...
This study explores the different implications of patent breadth and R&D subsidies on economic growt...
Basic research is mainly performed publicly. Yet in the US public research findings were not patenta...
This study provides a growth-theoretic analysis on the effects of intellectual property rights on th...
In this note, we explore the different implications of patent breadth and R&D subsidies on economic ...
AbstractThis study provides a growth-theoretic analysis of the effects of intellectual property righ...
This study provides a growth-theoretic analysis on the effects of intellectual property rights on th...
This paper presents a growth model that can explain the coexistence of intellectual property rights ...
This paper explains growth of labour productivity through (inter)national spillovers from R&D an...
The literature on R&D-driven economic growth suggests that technological innovations result from ent...
This survey provides a selective review of the literature on patent policy, innovation and economic ...
I develop a general equilibrium model of endogenous growth to jointly analyze two distinct theories ...