ABSTRACT

Intellectual property rights have become increasingly important for our modern economies in recent years. Although the entire patent system has a profound effect on the decision of firms of whether to conduct research and at which volume, patent law is the heart of the entire patent system. Therefore, this book focuses on the economic effects of certain provisions in patent law by using economic models dedicated to patent policy.

The first part of the book presents a brief overview over the history of patent systems and introduces the main components of modern patent systems. A short introduction of the principal provisions of US patent law constitutes the centre of the subsequent analysis as it serves as a link between law and economics. The second part presents core economic models for central provisions, collecting the most fundamental results in a national framework in the field of literature. Part three is concerned with selected provisions of patent law in an international framework. It provides valuable insights into the situation of developing countries which are the chief recipients of technology transfers.

Patent Policy will be of interest to researchers interested in the field of modelling patent policy. It can be also used as supplementary text in courses in Industrial Organization, Innovation Economics and Law and Economics.

chapter 1|4 pages

General introduction

part |2 pages

Part I Patent systems and patent law

chapter 2|1 pages

Introduction

chapter 3|14 pages

A short history of the patent system

chapter 4|8 pages

Foundations of patent systems

part |2 pages

Part II Patent policy from a national perspective

chapter 6|2 pages

Introduction

chapter 7|21 pages

The optimal patent term

chapter 8|26 pages

Patent scope

chapter 9|28 pages

Patent breadth

chapter 10|25 pages

The non-obviousness standard

part |2 pages

Part III Patent policy in an international framework

chapter 11|2 pages

Introduction

chapter 12|31 pages

New patentable subject matters

chapter 13|25 pages

Different non-obviousness standards