Growth and welfare effects of intellectual property rights when consumers differ in income
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Publication:2074055
DOI10.1007/S00199-020-01322-9zbMath1482.91137OpenAlexW3122028144MaRDI QIDQ2074055
Publication date: 4 February 2022
Published in: Economic Theory (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://www.econ.uzh.ch/static/wp/econwp221.pdf
endogenous growthincome inequalitynon-homothetic preferencesintellectual property rightsconsumption pattern
Microeconomic theory (price theory and economic markets) (91B24) Economic growth models (91B62) Consumer behavior, demand theory (91B42)
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Cites Work
- The macroeconomics of model T
- Intellectual property rights protection and endogenous economic growth revisited
- Dynamic effects of patent policy on innovation and inequality in a Schumpeterian economy
- The protection of intellectual property rights and endogenous growth: is stronger always better?
- Schumpeterian entrepreneurs meet Engel's law: The impact of inequality on innovation-driven growth
- Intellectual property rights protection and endogenous economic growth
- Patent protection, capital accumulation, and economic growth
- Sequential R\&D and blocking patents in the dynamics of growth
- Income Distribution and Demand-Induced Innovations
- On the Performance of Patents
- Innovation and Top Income Inequality
- Growing Through Cycles
- The Unequal Gains from Product Innovations: Evidence from the U.S. Retail Sector*
- Income Distribution in Macroeconomic Models
- Redistribution and growth: Pareto improvements
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