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Knowledge Disclosure, Patents and Optimal Organization of Research and Development Discussion: Alan Morrison Saïd Business School, University of Oxford and CEPR Sudipto Bhattacharya Sergei Guriev

Knowledge Disclosure, Patents and Optimal Organization of Research and Development

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Knowledge Disclosure, Patents and Optimal Organization of Research and Development. Discussion:Alan Morrison Saïd Business School, University of Oxford and CEPR. Sudipto Bhattacharya Sergei Guriev. Motivation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Knowledge Disclosure, Patents and Optimal Organization of Research and Development

Discussion: Alan MorrisonSaïd Business School, University of Oxford and CEPR

Sudipto BhattacharyaSergei Guriev

Motivation

• The agents who create ideas are frequently independent of the agents who develop them

• It is impossible to sell knowledge without leaking it

• What are the implications of this statement for – The best way to sell information– The best way to structure the research and development

units

Model

RU: effort eEx ante

Knowledge KDistn Fn G(K,e)

Interim Ex postDU1, DU2: effort E 0.5

P{Invention} = P(K,E)= KE2 Bertrand Compete: Payout 1 iff soleinventorInterim Sale of K

Open sales: Patent K to one party Knowledge LK disclosed to both parties

Closed sales: For lump sum + shares s Bilateral Rubinstein-style bargaining Outside option for both parties is open sale 1. Disclose the nature of K and let LK go at the same time 2. Bargain for K … Then decide whether to sell to other DU. This is unobservable: use s to render it incentive incompatible

Incentive Effects at Interim Date

Open Sales

DU get reservation utility increasing utilityMore ex post competition lower devt. effort from licenseeInterim E{surplus} dropping

Closed SalesOpportunistic sales less attractive lower s, higher devt. effortInterim E{surplus} increasing

STRONG IPRPROTECTION

L = leakage0 1WEAK IPR

PROTECTION

K=

kn

ow

led

ge

0

1Open Sales

Other DU more likely to Succeed less effortInterim E{surplus} dropping

Closed SalesOpportunistic sale less attractive lower s higher effortRU royalties droppingInterim E{surplus} increasing

Low K: closed sales incentive infeasible

Closed sa

les incre

asingly

attracti

ve

OpenClosed

Overall R&D Expenditures

STRONG IPRPROTECTION

L = leakage0 1WEAK IPR

PROTECTION

K=

kn

ow

led

ge

0

1Open

Closed

Open Sales Lower development effort from licenseeHigher development effort from non-licensee

Closed Sales Higher development effort

Lemma 4: Total either increasing or U-shaped

• In open region, L4 implies expenditure could be increasing

• Moving from O to C causes a drop in expenditure: could cancel closed sales effect

• For appropriate distn on K this happens … Inverted U shape

Ex Ante Structuring

• First best may violate RU budget constraint in closed sale case

• Could bring in a VC partner– VC buys some of the shares in the development

project– Further disclosure by RU IC, but harms VC/RU

coalition: hence a monitoring role for the VC

• But RU royalties dropping in K with closed sales– Deleterious incentive effect

• Could overcome with corporate venture which prevents the introduction of a VC

• For some K distns, ex ante incentive gains from venture outweight interim efficiency costs

Comments

• This is a rich and subtle model• Some of its many predictions are rather

surprising• While the paper is not a simple read, it repays

perseverance and I enjoyed working through it• I had some general questions about the set-up

and its interpretations

Questions

1. What in this model can be influenced by policy, and what is technological?• In the closed sale, L appears to describe

technological limitations to the disclosure process• In the open sale, this may be true, but may similarly

reflect the amount of information it is acceptable to steal

• This has an impact for the interpretation of the inverted U: what appears on the x axis may sometimes be hard to describe as “IPR protection”

Questions

2. The use by DUj of leaked information to invent when DUi has a patent might be regarded as a breach of patent• At present breach is costly to DUi because it

generates ex post competition• Its interesting in this case to think about whether

there should be a role for the courts: strength of IPR then has something to do with ex post enforcement

Questions

3. Is this really what the VC does? • In general, we expect the VC to have something to

do with selecting managers and monitoring them while they are actually working

4. I like the fact that the model can explain the inverted U-shape in terms of modes of sale. It would be interesting to read some speculation as to the effects of all of this upon consumers, so that a more complete picture of welfare could emerge, and with it some policy suggestions