In their 2003 Lawrence R. Klein Lecture, Michele Boldrin and David Levine argue that intellectual property rights may be damaging to social welfare. As empirical evidence for their theory they offer James Watt's steam engine patent, claiming that it delayed the Industrial Revolution by as much as two decades. We show that this claim, as well as the more general claim that Watt's story supports Boldrin and Levine's theory, rests upon a distorted summary of the historical record. Copyright 2006 by the Economics Department Of The University Of Pennsylvania And Osaka University Institute Of Social And Economic Research Association.
Over the last 20-years, markets come to dominate the way 'resources' are managed. The expansion of t...
In their recent book, Against Intellectual Monopoly, Michele Boldrin and David Levine conclude that ...
Economists have long seen the patent system as a crucial lever through which policymakers affect the...
In an earlier comment on Boldrin and Levines 2003 lecture on patents and their effect on technology,...
Perhaps no inventor or invention was as pivotal to the British industrial revolution than James Watt...
Great Britain (GB) was the first country to undergo an Industrial Revolution (1760-1850) and, in con...
Edmund Burke, one of England's great thinkers and orators of the eighteenth century, has been lauded...
T he case against patents can be summarized briefl y: there is no empirical evidence that they serve...
James Watt (1736-1819) was a pivotal figure of the Industrial Revolution. His career as a scientific...
This work focuses upon some differences and some similarities between James Watt and Josiah Wedgwoo...
In this special comment, the author posits that the patent system as it stands is archaic and oppres...
The literature on the economic analysis of intellectual property rights evidences a broad scholarly ...
We have always known that technological progress is important and this country has always aimed to p...
Despite a surge in the number of patents issued and an increase in patent rights in recent years, in...
The conventional wisdom holds that American patents have always been grants of special monopoly priv...
Over the last 20-years, markets come to dominate the way 'resources' are managed. The expansion of t...
In their recent book, Against Intellectual Monopoly, Michele Boldrin and David Levine conclude that ...
Economists have long seen the patent system as a crucial lever through which policymakers affect the...
In an earlier comment on Boldrin and Levines 2003 lecture on patents and their effect on technology,...
Perhaps no inventor or invention was as pivotal to the British industrial revolution than James Watt...
Great Britain (GB) was the first country to undergo an Industrial Revolution (1760-1850) and, in con...
Edmund Burke, one of England's great thinkers and orators of the eighteenth century, has been lauded...
T he case against patents can be summarized briefl y: there is no empirical evidence that they serve...
James Watt (1736-1819) was a pivotal figure of the Industrial Revolution. His career as a scientific...
This work focuses upon some differences and some similarities between James Watt and Josiah Wedgwoo...
In this special comment, the author posits that the patent system as it stands is archaic and oppres...
The literature on the economic analysis of intellectual property rights evidences a broad scholarly ...
We have always known that technological progress is important and this country has always aimed to p...
Despite a surge in the number of patents issued and an increase in patent rights in recent years, in...
The conventional wisdom holds that American patents have always been grants of special monopoly priv...
Over the last 20-years, markets come to dominate the way 'resources' are managed. The expansion of t...
In their recent book, Against Intellectual Monopoly, Michele Boldrin and David Levine conclude that ...
Economists have long seen the patent system as a crucial lever through which policymakers affect the...