Author List: Thatcher, Matt E.; Pingry, David E.;
Journal of Management Information Systems, 2009, Volume 26, Issue 3, Page 103-133.
We use a duopoly model of quality--price competition between a software innovator and an imitator to determine the socially optimal software patent policy and to assess the social welfare implications of alternative patent policies. We find that the optimal patent policy is to grant patent protection for the entire life of the innovative software product (i.e., set infinite patent length) and to set the novelty and nonobviousness requirement for attaining a patent (i.e., patent height) and the scope of patent protection (i.e., patent width) such that both the innovator and imitator produce higher-quality products than they would in the free market. This policy not only maximizes social welfare but also makes the innovator, imitator, and consumers better off than in the free market. However, counter to intuition, we find that firms exhibit lower research and development intensity under the socially optimal patent policy than they do under free market competition. While highly stylized, the model offers a useful framework within which researchers and regulators can think about the economic trade-offs among three patent policy parameters (length, height, and width) simultaneously.
Keywords: patent height; Patent length; patent policy; quality--price competition; R&D intensity; software patents; vertical product differentiation
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#5 0.364 consumer consumers model optimal welfare price market pricing equilibrium surplus different higher results strategy quality cost lower competition firm paper
#232 0.149 software development product functionality period upgrade sampling examines extent suggests factors considered useful uncertainty previous called complementarities greater cost present
#97 0.122 set approach algorithm optimal used develop results use simulation experiments algorithms demonstrate proposed optimization present analytical distribution selection number existing
#260 0.098 policy movie demand features region effort second threshold release paid number regions analyze period respect availability released lower effect results
#223 0.064 insurance companies growth portfolios intensity company life portfolio industry newly vulnerable terms composition operating implemented factors asset focus disaggregation choices
#242 0.051 market competition competitive network markets firms products competing competitor differentiation advantage competitors presence dominant structure share using incumbent make important