International Patenting Strategies with Heterogeneous Firms

43 Pages Posted: 13 Nov 2014

See all articles by Nikolas Jason Zolas

Nikolas Jason Zolas

U.S. Census Bureau - Center for Economic Studies; University of California, Davis

Date Written: August 01, 2014

Abstract

This paper analyzes how firms decide where to patent in a heterogeneous firm model of trade with endogenous rival entry. In the model, innovating firms compete with rival firms on price, where rivals force the innovating firm to reduce markups and lower the innovating firm's probability of obtaining monopolistic profits. Patenting allows the innovating firm to reduce the number of rival firms by increasing their fixed overhead costs, thereby providing higher expected profits and increased markups from reduced competition. Countries with higher states of technology, more competition and better patent protection have a greater proportion of entrants who patent. Industries tend to follow a U-shaped pattern of patenting where industries with high heterogeneity in production and low substitution, along with industries with low heterogeneity in production and high substitution patent more frequently. Using a generalized framework of the model, I estimate market-based measures of country-level patent protection, which when compared with other IP indices, suggests that not enough international patenting is taking place. Finally, I test the predictions of the model using a newly available technology-to-industry concordance on bilateral patent flows and show that firms are increasingly sensitive to foreign IP protection. Countries that choose to maximize their IP protection can increase the number of foreign patents by almost 10%.

Keywords: Patents, international trade, heterogeneous rms, endogenous markups, intellectual property, imperfect competition

JEL Classification: F12, F29, O34, L11

Suggested Citation

Zolas, Nikolas Jason, International Patenting Strategies with Heterogeneous Firms (August 01, 2014). US Census Bureau Center for Economic Studies Paper No. CES-WP- 14-28, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2523438 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2523438

Nikolas Jason Zolas (Contact Author)

U.S. Census Bureau - Center for Economic Studies ( email )

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Washington, DC 20233
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University of California, Davis ( email )

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Apt 153
Davis, CA 95616
United States

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