As concerns about systemic failure have come to the fore, attention in recent years increasingly has focused on the role of examiners in this process. If examiners differ from each other in how they approach applications, then they introduce arbitrariness into the process. In that vein, remarking on notable levels of examiner idiosyncrasy, lain Cockburn, Samuel Kortum, and Scott Stem notably quip that “”there may be as many patent offices as patent examiners. In a recent paper in the Review of Economics and Statistics, Mark Lemley and Bhaven Sampat follow Cockbum, Kortum, and Stem, arguing that applications examined by those with more experience are more likely to be granted than applications examined by those with less experience.
Columbia Law Review
2014