Discussion paper

DP14256 Intellectual Property and the Organization of the Global Value Chain

This paper introduces the concept of intangible assets in a property rights model of sequential supply chains. Firms transmit knowledge to their suppliers to facilitate input customization. Yet, to avoid knowledge dissipation, they must protect the transmitted intangibles, the cost of
which depends on the knowledge intensity of inputs and the quality of institutions protecting intellectual property rights (IPR) in supplier locations. When input knowledge intensity increases (decreases) downstream and suppliers' investments are complements, the probability of
integrating a randomly selected input is decreasing (increasing) in IPR quality and increasing (decreasing) in the relative knowledge intensity of downstream inputs. Opposite but weaker predictions hold when suppliers' investments are substitutes. Comprehensive trade and FDI data on Slovenian firms' value chains provide evidence in support of our model's predictions. They also suggest that, in line with our model, better institutions may have very different effects on fi rm organization depending on whether they improve the protection of tangible or intangible
assets.

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Citation

Bolatto, S, A Naghavi, G Ottaviano and K Kejžar (2019), ‘DP14256 Intellectual Property and the Organization of the Global Value Chain‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 14256. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp14256