
Conventional wisdom holds that robust enforcement of intellectual property (IP) right suppress competition and innovation by shielding incumbents against the entry threats posed by smaller innovators. That assumption has driven mostly successful efforts to weaken US patent protections for over a decade. This book challenges that assumption. In Innovators, Firms, and Markets, Jonathan M. Barnett confronts the reigning policy consensus by analyzing the relationship between IP rights, firm organization, and market structure. Integrating tools and concepts from IP and antitrust law, institutional economics, and political science, real-world understandings of technology markets, and empirical insights from the economic history of the US patent system, Barnett provides a novel framework for IP policy analysis. His cohesive framework explains how robust enforcement of IP rights enables entrepreneurial firms, which are rich in ideas but poor in capital, to secure outside investment and form the cooperative relationships needed to transform a breakthrough innovation into a marketable product. The history of the US patent system and firms' lobbying tendencies show that weakening patent protections removes a critical tool for entrants to challenge incumbents that enjoy difficult-to-match commercialization and financing capacities. Counterintuitively, the book demonstrates that weak IP rights are often the best entry barrier the state can provide to protect entrenched incumbents against disruptive innovators. By challenging common assumptions and offering a powerful integrated framework for understanding how innovation happens and the law's role in that process, Barnett's Innovators, Firms, and Markets provides important insights into how IP law shapes our economy.
This book investigates the counterintuitive relationship between intellectual property (IP) rights and market competition, arguing that robust patent enforcement actually facilitates innovation rather than suppressing it. Jonathan M. Barnett, a scholar of law and economics, utilizes a multidisciplinary approach to challenge the prevailing policy consensus that favors weakening patent protections. By integrating institutional economics, antitrust theory, and historical analysis of the US patent system, he constructs a framework demonstrating how IP rights serve as essential tools for capital-poor innovators to challenge entrenched incumbents.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the intersection of law and economics, particularly for its focus on the organizational mechanics of innovation. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is best suited for those with a background in legal theory or economic policy.
Page Count:
252
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190908610
ISBN-13:
9780190908614
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