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\def\WIPO{World Intellectual Property Organisation}
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The impact of intellectual property rights on labor productivity: do constitutions matter?
2021
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Detalles
Título
The impact of intellectual property rights on labor productivity: do constitutions matter?
Autor
Tipo de elemento
Journal article
ISSN
0960-6491 (Print) 1464-3650 (Online)
Resúmen
Focusing on a sample of 22 industries and 22 OECD countries and controlling for a full set of year-, industry-, and country fixed effects (and their interactions), we first show that intellectual property rights (IPRs) protection, by means of both constitutional provisions and ordinary laws, is positively associated with the dynamics industry-level labor productivity. Disentangling the impact of constitutional provisions from that of ordinary laws, we then show that constitutional provisions protecting IPRs positively affect the differential in labor productivity between high and low R&D intensive industries. This effect is driven by the mutually reinforcing impact of constitutional IPRs protection and R&D investment in the high R&D intensive industries. Furthermore, the impact of constitutions appears to be stronger in those countries where IPRs protection by ordinary laws is weaker.
Serie
Industrial and Corporate Change INCC 2021, 30(4), 884-904
Recursos vinculados
Publicado
Oxford, UK : Oxford University Press, 2021.
Lengua(s)
eng
Derechos de autor
https://academic.oup.com/pages/using-the-content/citation
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