Imagine that encryption and related technologies become so advanced that the knowledge produced by research and development are as excludable as any other good, while technology remains nonrival

In a world in which technology is both nonrival and excludable, do the government policies of government spending on R&D, tax incentives for R&D, and patents continue to make sense?


If technology were inherently excludable, patent protections would be redundant. Laws against theft would suffice. Both government spending and tax incentives would be justified, because private businesses would allocate resources to research and development based on profit expectations. Because new ideas are costly to produce, private R&D efforts will focus on ideas for which users will be willing to pay a high price, excluding all other potential users. The result is that available ideas are underutilized, given that the true resource cost of using them once they exist is near zero. The underutilization of ideas leads, as well, to underproduction of ideas, since technology is a key input in its own production.

Economics

You might also like to view...

What determines the position and shape of a society’s production possibilities frontier?

A. The physical resources of that society B. The skills of the workforce C. The level of technology of the society D. The amount of factories in the society E. All of the responses are correct.

Economics

Briefly describe the two arguments that economists make to defend the practice of resale price maintenance

Economics

An ______ is a graphical representation that shows the positive relationship between price and quantity provided.

a. individual supply curve b. individual demand curve c. individual equilibrium curve d. individual surplus curve

Economics

Which statement is true?

A. American manufacturing wages are the highest in the world. B. American manufacturing wage rates are the lowest of any industrial country. C. Our manufacturing wage rates are the second highest in the world. D. None of the statements are true.

Economics