Difference between revisions of "Entezarkheir (2010) - Patent Thickets And Market Value An Empirical Analysis"
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Revision as of 16:33, 18 March 2013
- This page is referenced in the Patent Thicket Literature Review
- This page is listed on the PTLR Core Papers page
Reference
- Entezarkheir, M. (2010), "Patent Thickets and Market Value: An Empirical Analysis", Working Paper
@misc{entezarkheir2010patent, title={Patent Thickets and Market Value: An Empirical Analysis}, author={Entezarkheir, M.}, year={2010}, abstract={The pro-patent shift of the United States has created a patent thicket. This has made the use of other firms innovations more costly, due to higher transaction costs and the possibility of hold up. Using a panel data on publicly traded US manufacturing firms from 1979 to 1996, this study finds a negative impact from the patent thicket on the market value of the firm. I also find that firms with larger patent portfolios experience a smaller effect, likely because stronger bargaining position lowers the occurrence of the hold-up problem for these firms. The advantage of larger firms is even more prominent following the pro-patent shift. My results also capture heterogeneity in the impact of the patent thicket across industries.}, discipline={Mgmt}, research_type={Empirical}, industry={}, thicket_stance={}, thicket_stance_extract={}, thicket_def={}, thicket_def_extract={}, tags={}, filename={Entezarkheir (2010) - Patent Thickets And Market Value An Empirical Analysis.pdf} }
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Abstract
The pro-patent shift of the United States has created a patent thicket. This has made the use of other firms innovations more costly, due to higher transaction costs and the possibility of hold up. Using a panel data on publicly traded US manufacturing firms from 1979 to 1996, this study finds a negative impact from the patent thicket on the market value of the firm. I also find that firms with larger patent portfolios experience a smaller effect, likely because stronger bargaining position lowers the occurrence of the hold-up problem for these firms. The advantage of larger firms is even more prominent following the pro-patent shift. My results also capture heterogeneity in the impact of the patent thicket across industries.