Difference between revisions of "Siebert VonGraevenitz (2008) - Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up In The Patent Thicket"

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|Has article title=Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up In The Patent Thicket
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*This page is referenced in the [[Patent Thicket Literature Review]]
 
*This page is referenced in the [[Patent Thicket Literature Review]]
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==Reference==
 
==Reference==
  
*Siebert, R. and Graevenitz, G. (2008), "Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up in the Patent Thicket?", Working Paper
+
*Siebert, R. and VonGraevenitz, G. (2008), "Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up in the Patent Thicket?", Working Paper
  
 
  @article{siebert2008does,
 
  @article{siebert2008does,
 
   title={Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up in the Patent Thicket?},
 
   title={Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up in the Patent Thicket?},
   author={Siebert, R. and Graevenitz, G.},
+
   author={Siebert, R. and VonGraevenitz, G.},
 
   year={2008},
 
   year={2008},
 
   abstract={In a patent thicket licensing provides a mechanism to either avoid or resolve hold up. We study the choice between ex ante licensing to avoid hold up and ex post licensing to resolve it. Firms’ choice of licensing contract is studied in the context of a patent portfolio race. We show that high expected blocking leads to ex ante licensing while ex post licensing arises if expected blocking is low but realized blocking is high. Also, ex ante licensing reduces firms’ R&D incentives. A sample selection model of licensing is derived from the theoretical model. In this framework theoretical predictions on effects of blocking are tested with data from the semiconductor industry. We show that licensing helps firms to resolve blocking. However, licensing is not a cure all: it decreases as fragmentation of property rights increases and arises mainly between large firms with similar market shares. Using a treatment effects model we also confirm the prediction that ex ante licensing reduces the level of R&D investment.},
 
   abstract={In a patent thicket licensing provides a mechanism to either avoid or resolve hold up. We study the choice between ex ante licensing to avoid hold up and ex post licensing to resolve it. Firms’ choice of licensing contract is studied in the context of a patent portfolio race. We show that high expected blocking leads to ex ante licensing while ex post licensing arises if expected blocking is low but realized blocking is high. Also, ex ante licensing reduces firms’ R&D incentives. A sample selection model of licensing is derived from the theoretical model. In this framework theoretical predictions on effects of blocking are tested with data from the semiconductor industry. We show that licensing helps firms to resolve blocking. However, licensing is not a cure all: it decreases as fragmentation of property rights increases and arises mainly between large firms with similar market shares. Using a treatment effects model we also confirm the prediction that ex ante licensing reduces the level of R&D investment.},
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   thicket_def_extract={},   
 
   tags={},
 
   tags={},
   filename={Siebert Graevenitz (2008) - Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up In The Patent Thicket.pdf}
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   filename={Siebert VonGraevenitz (2008) - Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up In The Patent Thicket.pdf}
 
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==File(s)==
 
==File(s)==
  
*[[Media:Siebert Graevenitz (2008) - Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up In The Patent Thicket.pdf|Download the PDF]]
+
*[[Media:Siebert VonGraevenitz (2008) - Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up In The Patent Thicket.pdf|Download the PDF]]
*[[:Image:Siebert Graevenitz (2008) - Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up In The Patent Thicket.pdf|Repository record]]
+
*[[:Image:Siebert VonGraevenitz (2008) - Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up In The Patent Thicket.pdf|Repository record]]
  
 
==Abstract==
 
==Abstract==
  
 
In a patent thicket licensing provides a mechanism to either avoid or resolve hold up. We study the choice between ex ante licensing to avoid hold up and ex post licensing to resolve it. Firms’ choice of licensing contract is studied in the context of a patent portfolio race. We show that high expected blocking leads to ex ante licensing while ex post licensing arises if expected blocking is low but realized blocking is high. Also, ex ante licensing reduces firms’ R&D incentives. A sample selection model of licensing is derived from the theoretical model. In this framework theoretical predictions on effects of blocking are tested with data from the semiconductor industry. We show that licensing helps firms to resolve blocking. However, licensing is not a cure all: it decreases as fragmentation of property rights increases and arises mainly between large firms with similar market shares. Using a treatment effects model we also confirm the prediction that ex ante licensing reduces the level of R&D investment.
 
In a patent thicket licensing provides a mechanism to either avoid or resolve hold up. We study the choice between ex ante licensing to avoid hold up and ex post licensing to resolve it. Firms’ choice of licensing contract is studied in the context of a patent portfolio race. We show that high expected blocking leads to ex ante licensing while ex post licensing arises if expected blocking is low but realized blocking is high. Also, ex ante licensing reduces firms’ R&D incentives. A sample selection model of licensing is derived from the theoretical model. In this framework theoretical predictions on effects of blocking are tested with data from the semiconductor industry. We show that licensing helps firms to resolve blocking. However, licensing is not a cure all: it decreases as fragmentation of property rights increases and arises mainly between large firms with similar market shares. Using a treatment effects model we also confirm the prediction that ex ante licensing reduces the level of R&D investment.

Latest revision as of 19:15, 29 September 2020

Article
Has bibtex key
Has article title Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up In The Patent Thicket
Has author Siebert VonGraevenitz
Has year 2008
In journal
In volume
In number
Has pages
Has publisher
© edegan.com, 2016


Reference

  • Siebert, R. and VonGraevenitz, G. (2008), "Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up in the Patent Thicket?", Working Paper
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  title={Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up in the Patent Thicket?},
  author={Siebert, R. and VonGraevenitz, G.},
  year={2008},
  abstract={In a patent thicket licensing provides a mechanism to either avoid or resolve hold up. We study the choice between ex ante licensing to avoid hold up and ex post licensing to resolve it. Firms’ choice of licensing contract is studied in the context of a patent portfolio race. We show that high expected blocking leads to ex ante licensing while ex post licensing arises if expected blocking is low but realized blocking is high. Also, ex ante licensing reduces firms’ R&D incentives. A sample selection model of licensing is derived from the theoretical model. In this framework theoretical predictions on effects of blocking are tested with data from the semiconductor industry. We show that licensing helps firms to resolve blocking. However, licensing is not a cure all: it decreases as fragmentation of property rights increases and arises mainly between large firms with similar market shares. Using a treatment effects model we also confirm the prediction that ex ante licensing reduces the level of R&D investment.},
  discipline={Econ},
  research_type={Empirical},
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  filename={Siebert VonGraevenitz (2008) - Does Licensing Resolve Hold Up In The Patent Thicket.pdf}
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File(s)

Abstract

In a patent thicket licensing provides a mechanism to either avoid or resolve hold up. We study the choice between ex ante licensing to avoid hold up and ex post licensing to resolve it. Firms’ choice of licensing contract is studied in the context of a patent portfolio race. We show that high expected blocking leads to ex ante licensing while ex post licensing arises if expected blocking is low but realized blocking is high. Also, ex ante licensing reduces firms’ R&D incentives. A sample selection model of licensing is derived from the theoretical model. In this framework theoretical predictions on effects of blocking are tested with data from the semiconductor industry. We show that licensing helps firms to resolve blocking. However, licensing is not a cure all: it decreases as fragmentation of property rights increases and arises mainly between large firms with similar market shares. Using a treatment effects model we also confirm the prediction that ex ante licensing reduces the level of R&D investment.