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Econ 522 Economics of Law Dan Quint Spring 2011 Lecture 7
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1 Established properties of an efficient property law system Private goods are privately owned, public goods are not Owners have maximum liberty over how they use their property Injunctive relief used when transaction costs are low, damages used when transaction costs high We also gave some thought to “testing Coase” In-class experiment: can UW undergrads allocate poker chips efficiently? (Cost me $118) Last Wednesday…
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2 Take 1: Full Information (values on nametags) Our experiment… 24/28 = 86%566032 purple chip2 4 4 6 6 8 red chippurple chipred chip8 purple chip 10 purple chip 10 purple chipred chip12 fraction of potential gains realized actual final allocation efficient allocation starting allocation
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3 Take 2: Private Information (values hidden) Our experiment… 20/24 = 83%444824 purple chip2 3 3 4 4 6 red chip6 purple chip 8 8 red chip 10 fraction of potential gains realized actual final allocation efficient allocation starting allocation
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4 Take 3: Uncertainty Take 4: Adverse Selection Our experiment… 100%12 8 chip 2 X die roll (actually 8) chip 3 X die roll (actually 12) fraction of potential gains realized actual final allocation efficient allocation starting allocation 100%664 chip 2 X die roll (actually 4) chip 3 X die roll (actually 6) fraction of potential gains realized actual final allocation efficient allocation starting allocation
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5 So… Coase seems to work pretty well My guess: if we redid the asymmetric information case a bunch of times, we wouldn’t get trade very often Comparing “uncertainty” to “asymmetric info”… Seller’s value was 2 X die roll, buyer’s value was 3 X die roll If nobody knows die roll, no problem – they can trade based on the expected value But if seller knows die roll, problem In strategic settings, information can have negative value – the seller could be worse off for having information! Our experiment…
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6 Sequential Rationality
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7 Game theory we’ve seen so far: static games “everything happens at once” (nobody observes another player’s move before deciding how to act) Dynamic games one player moves first second player learns what first player did, and then moves Dynamic games and sequential rationality
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8 Dynamic games FIRM 1 (entrant) EnterDon’t Enter FIRM 2 (incumbent) AccommodateFight (10, 10)(-10, -10) (0, 30) A strategy is one player’s plan for what to do at each decision point he/she acts at In this case: player 1’s possible strategies are “enter” and “don’t”, player 2’s are “accommodate” and “fight”
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99 We can look for equilibria like before we find two: (Enter, Accommodate), and (Don’t Enter, Fight) question: are both equilibria plausible? sequential rationality firm 1 asks, “once I’ve entered, would he really choose to fight?” We can put payoffs from this game into a payoff matrix… 10, 10-10, -10 0, 30 AccommodateFight Enter Don’t Enter Firm 2’s Action Firm 1’s Action
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10 Dynamic games FIRM 1 (entrant) EnterDon’t Enter FIRM 2 (incumbent) AccommodateFight (10, 10)(-10, -10) (0, 30) In dynamic games, we look for Subgame Perfect Equilibria players play best-responses in the game as a whole, but also in every branch of the game tree We find Subgame Perfect Equilibria by backward induction start at the bottom of the game tree and work our way up
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11 Firm 1 knows firm 2 is rational So he knows that if he enters, firm 2 will do the rational thing – accommodate So he enters, counting on firm 2 to accommodate This is the idea of sequential rationality – the assumption that, whatever I do, I can count on the players moving after me to behave rationally in their own best interest The key assumption behind subgame perfect equilibrium: common knowledge of rationality
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12 Applications of Property Law
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13 Intellectual property: broad term for ways that an individual, or a firm, can claim ownership of information Patents – cover products, commercial processes Copyrights – written ideas (books, music, computer programs) Trademarks – brand names, logos Trade Secrets Intellectual Property
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14 Example: new drug Requires investment of $1,000 to discover Monopoly profits would be $2,500 Once drug has been discovered, another firm could also begin to sell it Duopoly profits would be $450 each Information: costly to generate, easy to imitate up-front investment: 1,000 monopoly profits: 2,500 duopoly profits: 450 each
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15 Solve the game by backward induction: Subgame perfect equilibrium: firm 2 plays Imitate, firm 1 plays Don’t Innovate, drug is never discovered (Both firms earn 0 profits, consumers don’t get the drug) Information: costly to generate, easy to imitate FIRM 1 (innovator) InnovateDon’t FIRM 2 (imitator) ImitateDon’t (-550, 450)(1500, 0) (0, 0) up-front investment: 1,000 monopoly profits: 2,500 duopoly profits: 450 each
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16 Patent: legal monopoly Other firms prohibited from imitating Firm 1’s discovery Subgame perfect equilibrium: firm 2 does not imitate; firm 1 innovates, drug gets developed Patents: one way to solve the problem FIRM 1 (innovator) InnovateDon’t FIRM 2 (imitator) ImitateDon’t (-550, 450)(1500, 0) (0, 0) up-front investment: 1,000 monopoly profits: 2,500 duopoly profits: 450 each 450 – P
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17 Comparing the two outcomes FIRM 1 (innovator) InnovateDon’t FIRM 2 (imitator) ImitateDon’t (-550, 450)(1500, 0) (0, 0) up-front investment: 1,000 monopoly profits: 2,500 duopoly profits: 450 each FIRM 1 (innovator) InnovateDon’t FIRM 2 (imitator) ImitateDon’t (-550, 450 – P)(1500, 0) (0, 0) Without patents: Drug never discovered With patents: Drug gets discovered But…
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18 Without patents, inefficient outcome: drug not developed With patents, different inefficiency: monopoly! Once the drug has been found, the original incentive problem is solved, but the new inefficiency remains… Patents solve one inefficiency by introducing another CS 1,250 Profit 2,500 P = 50 P = 100 – Q Q = 50 DWL 1,250 CS 4,050 Profit 450 x 2 P = 10 Q = 90 DWL 50 MonopolyDuopoly up-front investment: 1,000 monopoly profits: 2,500 duopoly profits: 450 each Net Surplus = 2,750Net Surplus = 3,950
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19 First U.S. patent law passed in 1790 Patents currently last 20 years from date of application For a patent application to be approved, invention must be: novel (new) non-obvious have practical utility (basically, be commercializable) Patentholder whose patent has been infringed can sue for both damages and an injunction against future violations Patents are property – can be sold or licensed to others Patents: a bit of history
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20 Narrow patents might allow us each to patent own invention Broad patents might not “Winner-take-all” race to be first Patent breadth
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21 Does a patent on the “pioneering invention” cover the application as well? Can you patent an improvement to an existing product? Patent breadth
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22 Patent length Need to last long enough for firms to recover up-front investment… …But the longer patents last, the longer we have DWL from monopoly (Example from textbook: drug price drops from $15 to $1 per pill when patent expires) Tradeoff between ex-post inefficiency and ex-ante incentive provision U.S.: all patents last 20 years Jeff Bezos (founder of Amazon) once suggested software patents should last just 3 years Germany: full-term patents for major inventions, 3 year “petty patents” for minor ones, annual renewal fees Patent length
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23 Coase: without transaction costs, initial allocation of rights irrelevant for efficiency But transaction costs may be high Uncertainty on whether a patent is valid Uncertainty of outcome of research Many parties Do the details matter?
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24 Coase: without transaction costs, initial allocation of rights irrelevant for efficiency But transaction costs may be high Uncertainty on whether a patent is valid Uncertainty of outcome of research Many parties Do the details matter?
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25 Coase: without transaction costs, initial allocation of rights irrelevant for efficiency But transaction costs may be high Uncertainty on whether a patent is valid Uncertainty of outcome of research Many parties Do the details matter?
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26 government purchase of drug patents prizes Google $30 million prize for landing a rover on the moon direct government funding of research ~25% of research spending in U.S. is funded by government Alternatives to patents for encouraging innovation
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27 patents copyrights trademarks trade secrets
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28 Property rights over original expressions writing, music, other artistic creations Creations like this tend to fit definition of public goods nonrivalrous nonexcludable so private supply would lead to undersupply Several possible solutions government subsidies charitable donations legal rights to creations – copyrights Copyright
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29 Copyright law less rigid than patent law Unlike patent law, allows for certain exceptions Copyrights last much longer than patents Current U.S. law: copyright expires 70 years after creator’s death No application process Copyright law automatically applies to anything you’ve written/created Copyrights more narrow than patents Cover exact text, not general idea Copyright
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30 Retelling of Gone With The Wind, from point of view of a slave on Scarlett’s plantation, published in 2001 Margaret Mitchell’s estate sued to halt publication Eventually settled out of court Was there really any harm? Copyright
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31 Retelling of Gone With The Wind, from point of view of a slave on Scarlett’s plantation, published in 2001 Margaret Mitchell’s estate sued to halt publication Eventually settled out of court Was there really any harm? Copyright
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32 patents copyrights trademarks trade secrets
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33 Trademarks Reduce confusion over who made a product Allow companies to build reputation for quality Don’t expire, unless abandoned Generic names can’t be trademarked
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34 Trademarks – example WSJ article 9/17/2010: “Lars Johnson Has Goats On His Roof and a Stable of Lawyers To Prove It” Restaurant in Sister Bay WI put goats on roof to attract customers “The restaurant is one of the top- grossing in Wisconsin, and I’m sure the goats have helped.” Suing restaurant in Georgia “Defendant has willfully continued to offer food services from buildings with goats on the roof” http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704285104575492650336813506.html
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35 Trademark dilution
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36 patents copyrights trademarks trade secrets
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37 Protection against misappropriation But plaintiff must show… Valid trade secret Acquired illegally Reasonable steps taken to protect it Trade Secrets
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38 patents copyrights trademarks trade secrets
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