Legal scholars debate the merits of using the total value of the product, as opposed to the value of the component to which the technology contributes, as the base for a royalty in licensing contracts. In this paper we make use of the fact that these two royalty bases are equivalent to using ad valorem and per-unit royalties, respectively. We abstract from implementation and practicability considerations to analyze the welfare implications of the two rules. Ad valorem royalties tend to lead to lower prices, particularly in the context of successive monopolies. They benefit upstream innovators and do not necessarily hurt downstream producers. This benefit increases when there are multiple innovators contributing complementary technologies, a...
Abstract: Incorporating a durable-good monopoly model, this paper reexamines the argument on fee ver...
Incorporating patent litigation into a durable-good duopoly model, we revisit the optimal licensing ...
This paper considers the allocation of essential patents by a pro\u85t maximiz-ing monopoly. Using a...
There is considerable controversy about the relative merits of the apportionment rule (which results...
Published as an article in: Economics Letters, 2010, vol. 107, issue 2, pages 284-287.A patent provi...
Under the assumption of decreasing returns to scale, we compare several licensing mechanisms - per-u...
This paper analyses an optimal two-part licensing scheme based on ad valorem royalties within a diff...
Most of the patent licensing agreements that are observed include royalties, in particular per-unit...
In a context of product innovation, we study two-part tariff licensing between a patentee and a pote...
In a differentiated Stackelberg duopoly, we explore the licensing behaviour of an inside patent hold...
We consider the licensing of a cost-reducing innovation in a Cournot oligopoly where an outside inno...
We study how a firm licenses a product improvement innovation to its rival in the final market. Cont...
For an outside innovator with a finite number of buyers of the innovation, this paper compares two ...
We study how innovators can optimally design licensing contracts when there is incomplete informatio...
In the last several years, commentators have expressed serious concerns with the state of the law go...
Abstract: Incorporating a durable-good monopoly model, this paper reexamines the argument on fee ver...
Incorporating patent litigation into a durable-good duopoly model, we revisit the optimal licensing ...
This paper considers the allocation of essential patents by a pro\u85t maximiz-ing monopoly. Using a...
There is considerable controversy about the relative merits of the apportionment rule (which results...
Published as an article in: Economics Letters, 2010, vol. 107, issue 2, pages 284-287.A patent provi...
Under the assumption of decreasing returns to scale, we compare several licensing mechanisms - per-u...
This paper analyses an optimal two-part licensing scheme based on ad valorem royalties within a diff...
Most of the patent licensing agreements that are observed include royalties, in particular per-unit...
In a context of product innovation, we study two-part tariff licensing between a patentee and a pote...
In a differentiated Stackelberg duopoly, we explore the licensing behaviour of an inside patent hold...
We consider the licensing of a cost-reducing innovation in a Cournot oligopoly where an outside inno...
We study how a firm licenses a product improvement innovation to its rival in the final market. Cont...
For an outside innovator with a finite number of buyers of the innovation, this paper compares two ...
We study how innovators can optimally design licensing contracts when there is incomplete informatio...
In the last several years, commentators have expressed serious concerns with the state of the law go...
Abstract: Incorporating a durable-good monopoly model, this paper reexamines the argument on fee ver...
Incorporating patent litigation into a durable-good duopoly model, we revisit the optimal licensing ...
This paper considers the allocation of essential patents by a pro\u85t maximiz-ing monopoly. Using a...