The Effects of University Patenting and Licensing on Downstream R&D Investment and Social Welfare

Volume: 31, Issue: 4, Pages: 431 - 441
Published: Jul 1, 2006
Abstract
A central argument behind the Bayh-Dole Act presumed that firms had no incentives to invest in downstream R&D aimed at developing university inventions committed to the public domain. The empirical evidence on university patenting and licensing is partly at odds with the premises of this argument. Non-exclusive licensing of university patents has been common and lucrative, and in the area of biomedical technologies university patents and...
Paper Details
Title
The Effects of University Patenting and Licensing on Downstream R&D Investment and Social Welfare
Published Date
Jul 1, 2006
Volume
31
Issue
4
Pages
431 - 441
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