Documentos de trabajo
Intellectual Property Rights, Human Capital and the Incidence Of R&D Expenditures
Fecha
2008Registro en:
Series Documentos de Trabajo, No. 277 Marzo, 2008
Autor
Bravo Ortega, Claudio
Lederman, Daniel
Institución
Resumen
The authors extend the model by Aghion and Howitt (1992) to highlight
the role of intellectual-property-rights (IPRs) in the process of
innovation and structural change. The model predicts, in contrast to
existing literature, that lower risk-free discount rate increase imitation.
The model suggests that the enforcement of IPRs and punishment of
imitators has positive and differentiated effects on the level of R&D. It
also predicts that human capital fosters the development of R&D
activities. At the aggregate level, the model predicts that national R&D
expenditures as a share of GDP will depend not only on the level of
human capital and intellectual property rights, but that there are
interactions between these two variables, and their effects on R&D
might be follow unknown functional forms. The preponderance of the
empirical evidence suggests that complex interactions between human
capital and IPRs determine global patterns of R&D effort.