Discussion paper

DP8392 Venture Capital, Patenting, and Usefulness of Innovations

We analyze incentives to develop entrepreneurial ideas for venture capitalists (VCs) and incumbent firms. If VCs are sufficiently better at judging an idea's value and if it is sufficiently more costly to patent low than high value ideas, VCs acquire valuable ideas, develop them beyond the level incumbents would have chosen, and use patents to signal their companies' high value to acquirers prior to exiting. This increases the VC-backed companies' patenting intensity and long-run performance, but also infl
ates their acquisition prices, and lowers their acquirers' overall profits. Patent law usefulness clauses would reduce such excessive, signaling-driven investment and patenting intensity.

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Citation

Persson, L, P Norbäck, S Lippert and S Fabrizi (2011), ‘DP8392 Venture Capital, Patenting, and Usefulness of Innovations‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 8392. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp8392