Intellectual property rights and R\&D subsidies: are they complementary policies?
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Publication:1615998
DOI10.1007/S00712-017-0580-2zbMath1416.91283OpenAlexW2769316941MaRDI QIDQ1615998
Publication date: 31 October 2018
Published in: Journal of Economics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00712-017-0580-2
R\&D subsidyintellectual property rightelasticity of intertemporal substitutionpolicy complementaritypolicy substitutability
Production theory, theory of the firm (91B38) Economic growth models (91B62) General equilibrium theory (91B50)
Cites Work
- Optimal patent length and breadth in an economy with creative destruction and non-diversifiable risk
- The protection of intellectual property rights and endogenous growth: is stronger always better?
- The values of relative risk aversion and prudence: a context-free interpretation
- Economic growth under two forms of intellectual property rights protection: patents and trade secrets
- Intellectual property rights protection and endogenous economic growth
- Effects of patent length on R\&D: a quantitative DGE analysis
- The struggle to survive in the R\&D sector: implications for innovation and growth
- Prudence in bargaining: The effect of uncertainty on bargaining outcomes
- The Effects of Shifts in a Return Distribution on Optimal Portfolios
- Generalized Instrumental Variables Estimation of Nonlinear Rational Expectations Models
- Innovation, Imitation, and Intellectual Property Rights
- Higher Order Risk Attitudes, Demographics, and Financial Decisions
- The long-run growth effects of R \& D subsidies
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