Patent Pools and Dynamic R&D Incentives

Posted: 14 Feb 2017

See all articles by Vianney Dequiedt

Vianney Dequiedt

French National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA) - GAEL

Bruno P. A. Versaevel

Emlyon Business School; GATE (Groupe d'Analyse et de Théorie Economique)

Date Written: April 23, 2013

Abstract

Patent pools are cooperative agreements between two or more firms to license their related patents as a bundle. In a continuous-time model of multistage innovations, we characterize firms’ incentives to perform R&D when they anticipate the possibility of starting a pool of complementary patents, which can be essential or nonessential. A coalition formation protocol leads the first innovators to start the pool immediately after they patent the essential technologies. The firms invest more than in the no-pool case and increase the speed of R&D for essential technologies as the number of patents progresses to the anticipated endogenous pool size, to the benefit of consumers. There is over investment in R&D compared to a joint profit-maximization benchmark. If firms anticipate the addition of nonessential patents to the pool they reduce their R&D efforts for the essential patents at each point in time, resulting in a slower time to market for the pooled technologies.

Keywords: R&D Races, Innovation, Licensing, Competition Policy

JEL Classification: L24, L51, O3

Suggested Citation

Dequiedt, Vianney and Versaevel, Bruno P. A., Patent Pools and Dynamic R&D Incentives (April 23, 2013). International Review of Law and Economics, Vol. 36, 2013, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2916245

Vianney Dequiedt

French National Institute for Agricultural Research (INRA) - GAEL ( email )

BP 47
38040 Grenoble
France

Bruno P. A. Versaevel (Contact Author)

Emlyon Business School ( email )

23, avenue Guy de Collongue
Economics, Finance, Control
Ecully, 69130
France

GATE (Groupe d'Analyse et de Théorie Economique) ( email )

93, chemin des Mouilles
Ecully, 69130
France

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