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  4. Collaborative Innovation (or Not?!) when Product Performance is Critical
 
conference paper

Collaborative Innovation (or Not?!) when Product Performance is Critical

Weber, Thomas A.  
2021
Proceedings of the 54th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences
54th Hawaii International Conference on System Sciences

Research and development (R&D) collaborations are horizontal agreements among firms to join forces in their inventive activities. As in the context of the recent COVID-19 global pandemic, such collaborations are often promoted with an argument of increased R&D productivity. In numerous contexts, especially when marginal production costs are low, such as for medications or for software, the consumers’ surplus depends critically on the best-performing product available on the market, for—all else equal—this product will tend to take a dominant position. Using a simple two-stage model of innovation and subsequent product commercialization on a market with heterogeneous consumers, we show that a noncollaborative patent race with patent protection (for the best product) provides strong innovation incentives, leading to better performing products than a regime of noncollaborative research without patent protection or of collaborative research (with profit sharing).

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Collaborative Innovation (or Not_!) when Product Performance is C.pdf

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CC BY-NC-ND

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