Intellectual Property Protection as Strategic Trade Policy
نویسندگان
چکیده
منابع مشابه
Strategic trade policy, intellectual property rights protection, and NorthヨSouth trade
In this paper, we analyze the issue of optimal tariffs when the Northern and Southern firms compete in quantities in an imperfectly competitive Northern market and there are Ž . potentially varying degrees of intellectual property rights IPR violation by the South. IPR Ž . violation is reflected through the leakage of technological knowledge ‘‘spillovers’’ from the Northern to the Southern firm...
متن کاملStrategic Intellectual Property Protection Policy and North-South Technology Transfer
I analyze the welfare implications of protecting intellectual property rights (IPRs) in developing countries through its impact on innovation, market structure, and technology transfer. FDI, tariffs, and cooperation are introduced to the strategic IPR literature. In a North-South framework, the Southern government sets the IPR policy strategically by anticipating the Northern firm’s decision on...
متن کاملIntellectual property in agricultural trade
iii Foreword Intellectual property is becoming increasingly important to agricultural trade. The success of Australian agriculture may be determined more in the future by our ability to engage in effective marketing and product innovation, than our ability to continue to improve yields. If this is the case, the international rules governing the trade aspects of intellectual property are importa...
متن کاملIntellectual Property Rights Policy
C hronic hunger persists in most African countries even as crop production reaches peak levels on other continents (Johns Hopkins 2000). In sub-Saharan Africa, more than 600 million people live on small farms measuring no more than a few hectares each. Low productivity due to biotic and abiotic factors is responsible for food insufficiency and malnutrition. The rapid increase in population (nea...
متن کاملDoes Intellectual Property Lead to Intellectual Property Protection?
Researchers studying the differential commitment of countries to intellectual property rights, often appear to run into the claim that countries with a relatively higher and significantly changing technological base (the developed countries) opt for relatively stronger protection, whereas those with a relatively low and essentially unchanging technological base (the developing countries) opt fo...
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ژورنال
عنوان ژورنال: Asia-Pacific Journal of Accounting & Economics
سال: 2007
ISSN: 1608-1625,2164-2257
DOI: 10.1080/16081625.2007.9720797