Discussion paper

DP3127 Free Trade and Protection of Intellectual Property Rights: Can We Have One Without the Other?

This Paper is concerned with the interaction between trade policies and the protection of Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs). In particular, it investigates, within the framework of a general equilibrium model with endogenous growth, the welfare implications of an international agreement on one or both policy instruments. High tariffs and low patent protection both allow agents of an individual country to consume more respectively, through rent extraction redistributed by lump-sum transfers, and lower mark-up. Both high tariffs and low patent protection reduce the incentives for firms to do R&D, and, hence, growth. The main insight concerning optimal policies are first, that the two policy instruments are substitutes and second, that they are affected by the same Prisoner's Dilemma problem. As a consequence, an agreement in both policy instruments is needed to achieve any positive welfare gains, which supports the long standing claim of policy makers from developed countries that protection of IPRs should be included in multilateral trade agreements.

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Citation

Olivier, J and A Goh (2002), ‘DP3127 Free Trade and Protection of Intellectual Property Rights: Can We Have One Without the Other?‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 3127. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp3127