Analyzing Mechanisms to Incentivize Creation
A pharmaceutical company develops a life-saving drug, and an author writes a bestselling novel. In both cases, the benefits to society could potentially far exceed the initial revenue for the creators. Compare and contrast the specific legal mechanisms designed to encourage these two different types of creations. For each case, analyze how the mechanism allows the creator to capture a greater share of the value they've produced, thereby addressing the initial risk of underinvestment.
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Social Science
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CORE Econ
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Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
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The Trade-Off: Intellectual Property Rights and Market Competition
A software company spends millions on research to create a groundbreaking new algorithm. Once the software is released, competitors can easily reverse-engineer and copy the core algorithm at a fraction of the original cost. This potential for imitation discourages the company from making the initial investment. How does a legal framework that grants exclusive rights to the creator primarily address this specific market problem?
Incentivizing Pharmaceutical Innovation
Analyzing Mechanisms to Incentivize Creation
The Inventor's Dilemma
Match each intellectual property right with the specific market failure scenario it is primarily designed to correct.
The primary economic purpose of granting a patent to an inventor is to ensure the new invention is available to all potential users at the lowest possible price, thereby maximizing its immediate social benefit.
A government is considering a policy to significantly shorten the duration of patents for new inventions, arguing it will allow new technologies to become cheaper for consumers more quickly. From the perspective of encouraging the creation of new technologies, what is the primary economic risk of implementing this policy?
Evaluating Policies to Encourage Innovation
Two policymakers are debating how to best encourage private companies to invest more in developing new, beneficial technologies that can be easily copied by rivals once created.
- Policymaker A argues: 'The government should directly fund corporate research projects with grants. This ensures the research gets done.'
- Policymaker B argues: 'The government should strengthen the legal system that gives companies exclusive rights to their inventions for a period of time. This allows the market to reward successful innovation.'
Which policymaker's argument is more directly based on the economic principle of using property rights to correct for the market's tendency to under-provide goods with widespread public benefits?
Arrange the following statements into a logical sequence that explains the economic rationale for granting exclusive legal rights to creators of new ideas or technologies.