Compulsory Licensing – Evidence from the Trading with the Enemy Act

Compulsory Licensing – Evidence from the Trading with the Enemy Act

Compulsory licensing allows firms in developing countries to produce foreign-owned inventions without the consent of foreign patent owners. This paper uses an exogenous event of compulsory licensing after World War I under the Trading with the Enemy Act to examine the long run effects of compulsory licensing on domestic invention. Difference-in-differences analyses of nearly 200,000 chemical inventions suggest that compulsory licensing increased domestic invention by at least 20 percent.

Petra Moser and Alessandra Voena

American Economic Review

February 2012

I didn't find this helpful.This was helpful. Please let us know if you found this article helpful.
Loading...