Entry,reputation and intellectual property rights enforcement |
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Authors: | Jiahua Che Larry Qiu Wen Zhou |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Economics, Chinese University of Hong Kong;2. Department of Economics, Fudan University;3. Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Hong Kong |
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Abstract: | We examine how reputation concerns induce a multinational to partly withhold its entry into a developing country under weak intellectual property rights (IPR) enforcement. Equilibrium IPR violations are shown to arise only in the presence of such concerns. Holding constant a multinational's incentive to innovate, better IPR enforcement encourages entry but reduces social welfare. The multinational's incentive to innovate may be inversely U‐shaped in the strength of IPR enforcement. If timed properly, however, stronger IPR enforcement can foster innovation without compromising social welfare. Testable implications concerning observable IPR violations are derived. |
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Keywords: | D82 F10 F12 F23 |
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