Skip to primary content
ConsortiumInfo.org
Search
Sponsored by Gesmer Updegrove
  • Blog
  • About
  • Guide
  • SSO List
  • Meta Library
  • Journal
meta library

Patent Hold Up and Antitrust: How a Well-Intentioned Rule Could Retard Innovation

Title
Patent Hold Up and Antitrust: How a Well-Intentioned Rule Could Retard Innovation
Author
Luke Froeb, Vanderbilt University - Strategy and Business Economics, Bernhard Ganglmair, University of Texas at Dallas - School of Management - Department of Finance & Managerial Economics, and Gregory J. Werden, U.S. Department of Justice - Antitrust Division
Date
9/02/2015
(Original Publish Date: 12/10/2010)
Abstract
Licensing technology essential to a standard can present a hold-up problem. After designing new products incorporating a standard, a manufacturer could be confronted by an innovator asserting patent rights to essential technology. A damages remedy provided by antitrust or some other body of law solves this hold-up problem, inducing the socially optimal level of investment by the manufacturer, but it can reduce the innovator's licensing revenue and thereby retard innovation. The availability of an ex post damages remedy similarly alters the licensing terms in ex ante bargaining, with the result that fewer socially beneficial R&D projects are undertaken.
Link
Full Text from Social Science Research Network
Technical Areas
  • Antitrust (see also "Economics")
  • By Technical Area
  • Information Technology
  • Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)
  • Licensing
  • Litigation & Legal Issues
Gesmer Updegrove
  • Terms of Use and Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Sitemap